Friday, August 1, 2008

Who Are The La Senza Models

Africa

We're taught in school that man has reached the apex of the pyramid of evolution because of its high capacity of adaptation to the environment. Each of us, in the course of his life, is able to develop, better than any other living thing on earth, their strategies for responding to pressures external, in order to be able to react effectively to the difficulties it encounters.
Here, the so-called first world, we have long known how to satisfy our basic needs (put together with lunch and dinner). This, however, far from giving us peace, we want to give in much more sophisticated, we make great effort to meet and make us unhappy.
After all, Western society based on consumption has badly need - in order to thrive - and the needs of our frustration that stems from it. Moreover, the lords of the blacks marketing, with increasingly sophisticated instruments, constantly stimulate our latent needs, leveraging our deepest instincts. Extract from our wells, the real fuel of the economic system: the unhappiness. Then we
eternally beautiful women and powerful men. We want to prestigious cars and precious clothes. We hate our boss, with all our strength, because we want to be like him. We want to show others our power (for small it is), exercised arbitrarily and frightening. We want to be accepted by anyone, at any price, in any context: it is important to have someone be in a group below us. It is a life, our wholly permeated with anxiety, even fear of the judgments of others. The only thing that gives us brief moments of peace (I do not think to call it happiness) you feel the envy of the other fellow chain. This makes us not presume to be the last in the bottom of the list and he reassures us for a while '.
Two people very dear to me, each for its own account, were in Africa this year. When I asked them to tell me of their experience, the first thing they both have virtually the urgency of telling was the difficulty to return to a system governed by the needs of life completely unreasonable and irrational fears. They told me a real loss in not being able to recognize most of the fundamental reasons that are usually attributed to some aspects of our daily lives. The Africa leads, necessarily, to be essential and to regain the happiness that simple here we always take for granted. Both told me about a period of at least ten days in which they were fought by real feelings in opposition to one another: on the one hand the desire to hold on to happiness naked, alive, real, straightforward, tasty that Africa given them, the other a desire to return to that part of the world now fitting in perfectly to their forms. As if, come back, they were eager to get back deep in the skin that thorn that was in them forever and that Africa had removed.

of Africa is Paul Jewell.