what makes you CRY?
By chaolai
@chaolai (162)
Philippines
December 3, 2008 4:18pm CST
i am a person who cry easily. i cry when i am chopping the onions, i cry when i saw a sad movie and i cry with no reason at all. but the best part in crying is what you feel after you cried. the feeling of relieve, the feeling of being cuddled and feeling of fragileness. there are alot of reasons why people cry and there are alot of people who dont want to cry because they think that they are not strong enough when tears falls down within reach.
I think this is not right? they should cry not because they are men or anything but because they are human. Am i right? is there anything to loose when you cry?
1 person likes this
3 responses
@czafle (99)
•
1 Mar 09
i am in touch with my emotions so i would cry as and when somethings provokes me to. either by watching a movie, reading a book, listening to a song. i would start to worry if i stop crying though coz i would think im not normal anymore and something must be wrong. :D
@mystic888soul (390)
• Philippines
1 Mar 09
there's no wrong in crying..it's a pretty natural thing that we human do whenever we get to the limits of our emotions..one more things crying is a good thing which can help us to somehow feel relieved..right?
me, i do cry whenever i feel so lost and i have no one to run to...but then i still choose to cry by myself...that's why my friends and people around me always thought im a strong person who doesn't know how to cry..only my best friend amir and chad have the guts to call me a cry baby..hahaha..cause they are the only person whom i run to whenever i do feel like crying to burst out my feelings..^^
@lazeebee (5461)
• Malaysia
4 Dec 08
Not the usual things like sad movies of romance. Chopping onions is automatic - I just can't stop my eyes from tearing. Other than that, it's more like watching documentaries of children and old folks who have lost their families or homes; abandoned or abused. That touches me to the core. And there was one book that made me cry 'Tuesdays with Morrie' by Mitch Albom. It was really heart-wrenching to read about a man who's dying, yet could live out remaining days in such grace and dignity.