The choice to wipe away this selfish attitude is almost always a good one. But that pride is certainly connected to the pride we usually speak of on this blog – the feeling that we know better than anyone else – friends, family, or God. When we forget our pride, we bow our heads (symbolically or literally) and wipe that concede away momentarily. The pride I’m speaking of has to do with a conceit we have because we’re in a certain situation. And I sometimes find it difficult to admit to my children that I’ve wronged them as well. It’s even difficult for me to admit that I’m wrong to my wife (Note: In fact, I just had this issue as I was writing this post). Truth be told, I’m just incredibly prideful, so putting aside my pride is hard in general, even if it’s not a public situation. I’m the type to be easily embarrassed, so for me it’s a little harder. Up next? (Art by 刃天)īut Eita seems to think nothing of losing his pride in confrontations. Eita, for a second straight week, puts his pride in the backseat and endures physical pain and embarrassment to defend a “young maiden.” Whenever I watch embarrassing scenes like that, even enjoyable ones, I look away from the screen – it hurts me to see someone else get their pride hurt. I’ve really enjoyed Oreshura – while it’s characters and situations are retreads of retreads, there’s something fun and refreshing about the show, even when it repeats itself, like it did in episode six.
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