The motivation too, is readily rekindled in the desire and conviction that it is right and well deserved of the hatred. It takes no special effort to engage in hatred. Needless to say, that the skill and energy to facilitate and dissipate it are also handy and easy to come by. Incidentally, emotion is limitless, always available in great abundance, and to a great extent, inexhaustible. This is because it feeds on the faculties of inner emotions. Hate is not just an emotion or feeling, it is a strong human vice, and just like every other vice, it is difficult or practically impossible to suppress.
The beneficiary of hatred – the hated, would always notice, more so because the hater is not likely to pretend, hide or subdue the emotion of hate. And because it’s overt, hatred or hate can only be noticed by the party to whom it is expressed or directed at.
In its nature, hate is not a passive emotion but instead it’s an act an overt expression or display of disaffection to someone, buoyed by a fire-burning desire to hurt him or her in a way he or she notices and feels pain. Although the topic sentence in the dialogue above centres on the “cost of hatred”, it more or less teaches us about the nature of hatred. Yet, as amusing as this joke sounds, this is what exists in reality when it comes to the emotion of hatred. He couldn’t wait for the hate vendor to finish the list before he left because the cost was so high, he could not afford to pay such a price. “Whenever he or she laughs, you will cry.” “You will be deeply bitter whenever you set your eyes on the person you hate.” “And finally, it will eat up your heart.” “It will also cost you incurable worries.” “ It will first of all take away all your inner peace.” “Hmmmmmmmm, it would cost you so much.” He told him.
The businessman took a deep breath before answering: When the shop owner rushed up to him, the man asked him: Quite recently, I read a joke posted on a ‘Whatsapp’ chat by a friend about an embittered man who went to a shop to buy a ‘cup of hatred’.