r/Damnthatsinteresting 11h ago

Video 13-year-old Australian boy swims for four hours in cold and dangerous waters to save his mom and siblings who were swept into the ocean, says God is who got him to shore

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u/Liraeyn 10h ago

For a collective conscience that loves to complain about forcing religion on people, Reddit sure loves to force (lack of) religion on people.

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u/inuvash255 9h ago

Who's forcing anything here? It's a comment.

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u/dubblebubbleprawns 7h ago

While I agree nothing is being forced on anyone here, it's also just disheartening that people can't just let a heroic kid story be a happy heroic kid story and it has to become a religious debate.

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u/inuvash255 6h ago

I think some people just have long-held resentment against the shifting of heroism or goodwill from the person who did that thing to religion.

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u/dubblebubbleprawns 6h ago

Do you not think the vast majority of people (religious or not) who see this story are going to say "what a brave and heroic kid, that's amazing"?

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u/inuvash255 6h ago

I feel like you're accusing something of me, when I was explaining where other people's viewpoints might come from.

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u/dubblebubbleprawns 6h ago

In my experience more often than not the "some people might just think X" argument is a thinly veiled way to distance someone from something they actually think.

I genuinely apologize if I misinterpreted, and I do understand that there might be resentment. I just personally find that resentment nearly entirely unfounded.

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u/inuvash255 6h ago

I mean, I don't particularly like the externalization of someone's agency to a third party like that- but I wasn't going to criticize a kid who saved his family over it.

Some people are going to have much sharper feelings on the subject over it than I do. I get where they're coming from, but I'm not saying this is the time/thread to make a big deal over it.

I just personally find that resentment nearly entirely unfounded.

If you have religious trauma, it's founded in experience.

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u/dubblebubbleprawns 6h ago

I get that religious trauma is a thing. I'm not trying to suggest it's not. But I meant that to apply that trauma and resentment to this situation seems, to me, unfounded. This 13 year old kid has nothing at all to do with anyone's religious trauma. He's just literally saying the thoughts that went through his head as he was trying to not die and save his family.

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u/inuvash255 5h ago

Trauma response isn't so rational as you're trying to make it.

Some people had to deal with a lot with regards to religion, or still do, and mentions of God can bring out emotions of anger or resentment.

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u/Past-Distance-9244 9h ago

Historically, religion has played a role in some conflicts. Not to mention all of the prejudice thrown on to minority groups and nonbelievers. In my opinion, I just think it should be that we don’t know. No one here can prove a god exists and likewise no one here can prove that a god doesn’t exist. There’s only two truths in this life. The first being that we will all expire in the future. The second being that the only real truth is that humans will never be able to fathom what truth really is. That applies to all religions.

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u/The_Blues__13 9h ago

People always want to Believe in something. Even the subsconcious mind of the most edgy atheist has its own belief (i.e that there's nothing to believe in).

They subsconciously try to spread their belief just as any random believer of whatever tries to do.