Not exact matches
They grow up believing in an Eternal Hell of fire and brimstone,
talking snakes, the Doctrine of Original Sin, animals in an ark, a Young Earth paradigm, the notion that
people lived
to be hundreds of years old a few thousand years ago, patriarchs that practiced child sacrifice and committed genocides, books that are supposed words of gawd that contradict
real world observations, deities that kill their own children (
human manifestations of their own selves) for the sake of sins that they never committed, the symbolic cannibalism and vampirism of a deity... I could go on for days.
It's Ozu's unique way of bringing realism
to a film that allows for such speculations: despite his unusual editing style, tatami - level camera placement and generally fixed camera (though it moves more here than in any Ozu I can recall), everything in an Ozu film feels
real:
people talk like normal
people about normal
human issues.
So, coming back
to the
human interactions — in order
to test a product in front of
real people, we need
to talk to them.
It means developing
real relationships with potential customers,
talking to people about the ideas that underpin your art, and being an approachable
human being who cares about others, who is also unafraid
to ask
people to pay for your work.
But for
people who want a
human touch for their investment, think about going with a
real - life financial advisor who you can
talk to about your money.
You might think this trend represents
people's preferences for the quick fix of a pill, rather than a slog through
talk therapy, but you'd be wrong: surveys have consistently shown that depressed and / or anxious
people and their families would rather
talk to a
real, live,
human therapist than fill a prescription.