@Rich Parsons, Rich, you know I am amazed you are still around after the stuff you have been involved in.. I think there is a purpose for you! specially since these situations which benefit from your intervention seem to root you out! Thank you for sharing these.. you are another one I would ask.. why have you not written all of your stuff down into a book!! Let me ask you what is at the crux of what I hope to understand.. why do you feel inclined to intervene where your intervention may help some one else in those situations you have no obligation or duty to do so? Why do you act when it is not your job, you are not in the role of police, what cause you do it? DO people not all have their lessons to learn, people will not always have you around to help, right? It is an instinct among people who do martial arts maybe?? Thank you again, I am grateful to you as always x
@Dirty Dog, thank you for explaining and I understand exactly and agree how you mean this about emotional clouding of judgement.. It would be your advice maybe in a situation involving the safety of another person is it best to eliminate or put aside any potential emotional consideration in order to ensure best outcome? It can be difficult to do this, right? Like you know if that person were some one you cared for and that emotional consideration could be the thing to persuade you to act irrationally.. Even though I know you are tough you have obvious heart and humanity and so that is why I am asking is it possible to put emotional judgement sufficiently far out of the equation as to make any decision to act a rational one?? Thank you again Jx
@Buka, Aha you will have to forgive me my friend when you explained 'the projects I had thought it was like analagous to being raised in a tough area, though that is just what I pick up on tv and not real life, apologies

Still, you are saying about being sure whether to jump in or not is instinct? Some times in following that instinct to intervene there are created consequences further down the line we are not always party to at the moment of our acting, yes? means our instinct to act did not have the result we had genuinely intended.. do you follow how I mean this?? I am not talking about second-guessing an instinct to act, that is not possible in the moment, rather that instinct, even if it has the immediate positive effect, can be shown with hindsight to have been the wrong thing to do.. I hope this is clear.. If this can happen, and this can also happen if our decision was to NOT act, then what is the best thing to be done? This is too much of a question?
@Bill Mattocks, hey thank you again for replying, what you have said is very helpful and but also you have me concerned for you to hear you own this as shame and hold your self responsible.. If you are able to say to me I would want to ask you why is this? why are you claiming ownership of this shame when all you did was not get involved in a dangerous situation, this is what most everyday normal cautious people do, no?? I want to ask you please same question I ask of
@Buka above because you have a measured way of thinking also.. like if you intervene in a harmful situation on behalf of another person and -as you had found- it conclude less positively than you had wanted -or- you do NOT act in a situation and then regret the inaction or develop shame-based thoughts then how are you or how is any one to best enable them selves to do what is "right" in that situation specially if there is perhaps not much time for rational cogitating? I mean if it is as you say, retrospectively proven to be a poor decision either to act or not act, does that preclude it from being the "right" thing at the time we acted?? like morally the right thing.. I am sure you appreciate how I mean that term.. least I hope so.. thank you again and thank you for your honesty and forthrightness it is a great help
@Xue Sheng, hello XS, hey will you think on this for me yes?? like you said "Honest answer; I really do not know, I just reacted to the situation without much thought" and I understand how you mean this of course.. I like to know what you mean you just reacted to help the old guy.. or the same could apply to a family member say.. you mean like your muscles just activated? why did they not activate in a way that got you away from this trouble instead of into it?? is it some thing in built into us? do you follow? if not thank you for taking time at least x
@oftheherd1, hey! Well yes I cannot help my self noticing any person of a faith, it is why your view is also important to me and why I persist in asking questions of you

hope you do not mind.. you have raised a lot of points I have thought about.. I will not take up all of your time.. just want to ask of you like you pose a rhetorical in respect of public defence which I think cut to the knub "Do they find fear overcomes their desire to help people?" can I ask do you think if we did not all have that -what is perfectly normal and rational fear hardcoded into our psyche- would our desire to help people come out even more?? It is like self-protection and preservation that hinder us from acting in a righteous way?? -again I hope you understand what I mean by that word in the truest moral sense.. what do you think.. it is fear, right?? this is very helpful for me you have got me thinking where is that fear from.. thank you.. it is enlightening me to a truth maybe.. what do you think? there is not fear in a true faith and a pure heart yes? sorry I am off haha.. You also said that the guy was not going to physically attack your beloved wife.. you were absolutely certain of that.. 'period' you said.. I want to ask where did you come by that certainty that no harm would befall your wife in your presence? It is interesting I believe that we can have this assuredness and yet then we also can doubt it and not know what is the right thing to do -I am pointing this at my self in a situation I am in between intervening and fearing consequence for me and for the other or not intervening through fear of physical harm and also of unknown consequence.. either way fear is a factor right? And what is the right thing is surely always the right thing?? I am sorry this is a jumbled question.. I very much respect and appreciate your time though thank you again my friend x
@kempodisciple, hey thank you for replying.. so it seem rationally that we are more likely to intervene or put our selves in harms way on behalf of another peson if that person is of more "value" to us.. yet there is some thing else going on anomalous to that hypothesis that suggest we have cause to intervene anyway.. interesting too that those people subsequently became close friends of yours? What can be taken from that I wonder? I have seen this before where people will rescue strangers from road traffic accidents only to become lifelong friends.. that is interesting to me.. thank you again x
@GiYu - Todd, you make another very interesting point.. like if we consider what we would hope another person would do to assist us were we in harms way might that inform our own decision to act on THEIR behalf I wonder.. that is a good point you have made thank you.. Still I am hearing in your words you have a dislike for the stupid things people do that get them in danger.. we do not all do stupid things some times?? I do alot haha.. Maybe I would not deserve help from any one else in that case?? I know my son had done some regrettable things specially with money, it was never in me though to withdraw my assistance.. I sense there is some thing else in you about that and but I will not pry in public xx.. Hey I sent wishes the testing went as you hoped it would

x
@donald1, hey there thank you for your reply.. well let me ask you this, why do you give a small bit of money to someone more needy through a charitable donation? That is money you can spare? Can you forsee circumstances that you would give away money if you could not spare it? thank you again