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How to Win at Life
#1
Have the mostest power out of everyone.  I love being the bestest.  Makes things easy.  My karma is glistening like an early morning slime trail in a garden.  It can't be missed and often leaves a feeling of dread.  

Plants!  I eat them all!
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#2
Now THIS would make for a good debate topic! How does one win at life?
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#3
You should define what winning at life means for you first of all and realize it's different for a lot of us.
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#4
Being alive?

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk
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#5
We win when we stop backstabbing ourselves.
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#6
We win by not loosing. It's easy when you define both outcomes. Teddy Rupskin knows.

and chucky 
Just need a montage...
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#7
hehe how cute the bear lullaby Smile.

I also think that the prize is to be alive. As long as we are alive we can keep evolving and growing. But how to win? I think we need to know what game we are playing Big Grin. What our purpose/goal is. And that we, imo, need to walk with spirit to get there (i.e. anywhere that matters).
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#8
I don't think we've answered this yet. :/

The answers suggested so far read, (from my perspective), like the following....

1. Become as powerful as possible. - Let's go all out and say we become totally omnipotent and omniscient. Then what? We might re-order the universe to our own preferences as "Evil" set out to do in the movie "Time Bandits"...

The problem is, once we've completed all that business, what next? Why go through the ordeal of becoming omnipotent and changing the universe only to have nothing to do after but sit around and eat cheesecake when we can do that now?

2. Stop interfering with ourselves getting what we want/need. - This certainly seems like good advice, but er, what ought we to want or need?

3. Just don't lose. Look at the outcomes of things first. - As a chess player I know that not losing does not necessarily mean winning. There is stalemate, after all. Gazing into the future and choosing to do that which leads to what you prefer again seems like a good plan, (for those who can manage it), yet the question remains... what outcome should we want?

4. Being alive. - I would guess this refers more to intensity than longevity. It feels like it might be on point, but I'd like to see it explained in more detail.
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#9
When we stop wanting and stop talking to ourselves, the chance for a breakthrough from higher increases. This brings recognition of the universal intent. Aligning our pitiful lower intent with the higher intent is success, albeit at various levels. We find a true purpose.
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#10
Lose to win! Big Grin  Embody the paradox
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#11
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