What if I could speak directly to your brain? Bypassing your prejudices, your preconceptions, your conditioning, your indoctrination.? What would you be willing to learn, to understand better, without those impedances and encumbrances?
Let’s face it, you’ve been exposed to a continuous barrage of bullshit since the very first moment you could achieve comprehension.
When you were a child, depending on the culture in which you lived, you were probably told to believe in something like Santa Claus, the tooth fairy, Baba Yaga, or some other fiction designed to manipulate your compliance. At a later age, you were either told or came to understand that these characters were fictional. But by then, they had served their purpose. You had been nice instead of naughty to be in the good graces of one of these fictional characters.
More recently, you have been exposed to a barrage of what is referred to as marketing and advertising. Most of these are examples of classic human BS. The trouble is that since bullshit has been so normalized, your ability to filter it and to understand the meaningful components of the data that’s constantly being spewed at you has been severely compromised. Suspension of disbelief is something that’s both good and bad, but there are contexts for its goodness and for its badness.
Marketing is a little too syour decision and force yourself to think that your clothesimilar in that it’s purpose is to encourage your compliance. In most cases, it is to get you to part with your resources. Unfortunately, when you realize that he promises of the marketing were as accurate as the tooth fairy, and that your resources are more valuable than a discarded tooth, it’s too late to get your resources back. Your only option seems to be to rationalize your decision. The promises of the marketing were as accurate as the tooth fairy decision. The bad a decision and force yourself to think that your clothes are similar in that its promises of the marketing were as precise as the tooth fairy and moved yourself to believe that the clothes you are wearing are your decision and force yourself to think that your clothes and force yourself to believe that the clothes you are wearing are your decision and force yourself to feel that your clothe.
The tough questions to pose are, “Am I genuinely pleased with the performance of the products I own?” And, “Am I willing to believe the marketing story I’ve been told to justify my choices even in the face of evidence to the contrary, which I experience daily? “
Would any company to whom you are loyal be willing to have you ask those questions?
Please ask those questions.



