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Where Limited Edition had you kind of escaping the confines of the punishments, with Sisyphus able to finally roll that boulder up a hill and Tantalus finally able to eat the fruit on the branch ...
And so often, many of us feel like Sisyphus, constantly pushing a boulder up a hill, or like Gatsby - always reaching for that elusive green light. So often, we miss our great expectations.
The former king of Ephyra, Sisyphus was ultimately punished for his self-aggrandizing and deceitfulness by having to roll a giant boulder up a hill for eternity, only to have it come rolling back ...
Consequently, Zeus dispatched Sisyphus to the underworld, where Hades deemed that Sisyphus would eternally push a boulder up a hill, only to watch the boulder roll down the hill so the workout ...
Or that the fancy-dancy high-tech camera’s interior calendar thought it was still a leap year. (Though that actually takes a leap of faith, but what doesn’t, these days?) Well, maybe that would take ...
Sisyphus is a one button game about pushing a boulder. Mash the spacebar as much as you can and see how high you can go. Mess up and you’ll slide all the way back to the bottom.
But when it comes to the big goals—global stability, a fair economy, a solution for the climate crisis—it can feel as if you’ve been pushing a boulder up a hill only to see it come rolling ...
Boulder City is not alone in exhibiting woefully anti-democratic behavior. Such grassroots suppression is happening with increasing frequency — and burgeoning ingenuity — all across the country.
The story of Sisyphus illustrates how frustrating it is for employees to continuously struggle in their work, seeing absolutely no purpose or value in it. Dan Ariely conducted a study recently ...
Jason Allemann of JK Brickworks has created a kinetic sculpture of Sisyphus, the Greek mythological character punished to repeatedly push a boulder up a hill for eternity. As if to lighten the ...