Wait through trials and questions. Nietzsche.

 Wait through trials and questions. Nietzsche.



Waiting is not doing nothing, it is waiting.


He who waits for the door to open knocks, and he who waits for the fruit to fall shakes the branch.


To borrow Nietzsche's words, we should not become "those who wait blindly", "those who wait for an imaginary day," and such "those who guard the land and keep the shops." Only in the midst of endless questions and attempts can we wait and say.


Nietzsche expressed his own waiting as follows:



“Trying and asking questions, that was my whole journey.”



Of course, there are things that come regardless of our waiting. For example, a train enters the platform when the time is right. However, such an incoming train is not the arrival of the future, but the inertia of the past, and the continuation of daily life, not the occurrence of events. Even the same train arrives in the midst of fierce waiting



Waiting is practice.


It can be said to be a welcome towards the coming, an approach towards the coming, and the ripening towards a fruit.



Such is Nietzsche's "Beyond Good and Evil".


This book is a kind of foreshadowing and waiting. Just as dark clouds gathering over a mountain are a foreshadowing and waiting for lightning, this book is full of future philosophy, a sign of what is to come. But how many people confuse 'waiting' with 'being idle'?


<Beyond Good and Evil> is a waiting for a certain god we will meet at the end, approaching and ripening towards that god.



In Nietzsche's philosophy, the subject of waiting and the subject of arrival converge.


'I' seeks 'I' and 'I' waits for 'I'.


On that road, 'I' is becoming 'I'.



Born of myself, but a stranger to myself.


Through trials and questions, I wait for me.

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