This is strictly my opinion based on observation, but I think "nice people" can develop their niceness not so much from what they have experienced, but more by how they think/feel from what they have experienced.
Empathy plays a big part in being "nice". How you think about where you've been and how you think about what you have experienced plays a part, too.
So I suppose for me, it's not so much about where I've been, it's more about how I think about where I've been/experienced.
Though pain can be a great teacher, it is far from being a gentle one. But it is the moving through the darkness of pain that one can often be presented with the dawning of a better day for their head and their heart and their hands. The "BE, KNOW and DO" of the human being.
There's a great little book out there I got on my 15th birthday and it's messages really helped me when I later experienced what many people would consider "traumatic events".
It's called "Man's Search For Meaning", written by Viktor Frankl
Best Posts in Thread: War vets: nicest peole around.
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nwlivewire DI Senior Member Showcase Reviewer Blood Donor Veteran Army Navy
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Jack Peterson DI Forum Luminary Highly Rated Poster SC Connoisseur Veteran Air Force
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Bearing in Mind, that All Countries have War Vets not just the US. In the UK we are/Where called Officers and Gentlemen, NCO's and Enlisted men were /are considered above the a norm of the Rat Race. Something Long Forgotten
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I don't think being a vet makes much of a difference. I know some real nice guys that are vets....but I also know some that are monsters (especially after a few drinks). Just my 2 cents.
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