What does “Optimism keeps us moving forward rather than to the nearest ‘high-rise ledge’” mean?
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Chapters
00:00 What Does “Optimism Keeps Us Moving Forward Rather Than To The Nearest ‘High-Rise Ledge’” Mean?
00:58 Accepted Answer Score 7
01:19 Answer 2 Score 1
01:32 Thank you
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Hire the world's top talent on demand or became one of them at Toptal: https://topt.al/25cXVn
--------------------------------------------------
Music by Eric Matyas
https://www.soundimage.org
Track title: Secret Catacombs
--
Chapters
00:00 What Does “Optimism Keeps Us Moving Forward Rather Than To The Nearest ‘High-Rise Ledge’” Mean?
00:58 Accepted Answer Score 7
01:19 Answer 2 Score 1
01:32 Thank you
--
Full question
https://english.stackexchange.com/questi...
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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...
--
Tags
#meaning
#avk47
ACCEPTED ANSWER
Score 7
Suicides often jump from tall buildings: the "high-rise ledge" is a window ledge in a high-rise building, and the sentence is saying that optimism is what keeps us moving forward instead of killing ourselves.
There's a great phrase I first learned from John Irving's Hotel New Hampshire, and which later became a song by Queen: "Keep passing the open windows."
ANSWER 2
Score 1
I suspect the author was thinking of optimism and pessimism. Implying pessimism by suggesting suicide by reference to tall buildings amounts to hyperbole dressed up as euphemism.