I'm just going to... put some stuff here. Yeah. Reasoning's seasoning and shall be added later if i ever get to it.
Smart
Fault (not the geology definition, silly)
Attitude/talking back
Girly/Manly (should be obvious)
huzz/getting girls
Just the way it is
Deserve
*Shaking one's head and walking away without an explanation*
It's just an opinion
Need vs. Want
Punishments— especially those given to the entire class for something only one person did
Grades
Schedules
Tests
The decision of school subjects
making learning yucky
Memorization
The constant fear of not doing something right
Locker rooms/bathrooms
The Why game is a really good 1-player game. At the very least, it asks good questions. After all, if you don't have a good reason to do something, it can be beneficial to just... stop doing it.
But sometimes, you get to a weird place where you question why and may not have a very good answer. Why follow your morals? If you don't, bad will happen. Why do you not want bad to happen? Because of the very nature of it being bad. And what makes something bad?
Here we have something very, very subjective. What makes something bad for you may not be something bad for someone else. A good thing, though, is to know the answer to this question. Try it right now, if you haven't already. What do you want? Not specifically. In general, what makes something good?
To me, what makes something good is... well... 🤷. I hold the opinion that there is no objective truth, and I think all answers are equally viable. Most people however (I think?), like happiness and therefore I try to bring more happinness to more people. This is, of course, ill-defined, but it's good enough so that I can use it like an axiom along with the information I know to make a logical arguement for my decisions. Regardless of what your answer to the question is, it's important to follow it. Your goal should be to do good, and everything else should be secondary. After all, if something else were more important, that would be the definition of good instead. And, knowing this, base your decisions on evidence such as feelings and data and this 'axiom' in order to do things that are... well... good!
... nothing but crumbs at the end of this page...