Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
Some animes teach you lessons like the Pokemon anime teaches you about the value of teamwork with a lot of depth and bonding moments there.
Hamtaro teaches you the value of friendship and manners among those around you as well as how to keep friends.
Which lessons do you think Dragon Ball teaches?
Hamtaro teaches you the value of friendship and manners among those around you as well as how to keep friends.
Which lessons do you think Dragon Ball teaches?
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Dragon Ball Ireland
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
For me it's mostly been never giving up and striving to reach your goals no matter how impossible they may seem.
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- Polyphase Avatron
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
If you try hard enough, your enemies can become your friends.
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- RandomGuy96
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
Don't get too cocky and complacent; no one is infallible and untouchable, and thinking you are and using it as an excuse for carelessness is just setting yourself up for humiliation.
The Monkey King wrote:It was actually Beerus disguised as Zarbon #StayWokeRandomGuy96 wrote:He's probably referring to the Bardock special. Zarbon was the one who first recommended destroying Planet Vegeta because the saiyans were rapidly growing in strength.dbgtFO wrote: Please elaborate as I do not know what you mean by "pushing Vegeta's destruction"
Herms wrote:The fact that the ridiculous power inflation is presented so earnestly makes me just roll my eyes and snicker. Like with Freeza, where he starts off over 10 times stronger than all his henchmen except Ginyu (because...well, just because), then we find out he can transform and get even more powerful, and then he reveals he can transform two more times, before finally coming out with the fact that he hasn't even been using anywhere near 50% of his power. Oh, and he can survive in the vacuum of space. All this stuff is just presented as the way Freeza is, without even an attempt at rationalizing it, yet the tone dictates we're supposed to take all this silly grasping at straws as thrilling danger. So I guess I don't really take the power inflation in the Boo arc seriously, but I don't take the power inflation in earlier arcs seriously either, so there's no net loss of seriousness. I think a silly story presented as serious is harder to accept than a silly story presented as silly.
Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
This for sure, as well as persevering through dark times.Dragon Ball Ireland wrote: Mon Feb 03, 2020 2:50 pm For me it's mostly been never giving up and striving to reach your goals no matter how impossible they may seem.
Another thing that doesn't get mentioned as often is the idea that everything happens for a reason. If Pilaf hadn't released Piccolo, Goku would have lost to Raditz and the earth would be doomed. If Goku hadn't died against Raditz he never could have trained with King Kai and gained the strength to fend off the other Saiyans. If Captain Ginyu never stole Goku's body, he'd have had no chance of beating Frieza because he'd never get his Zenkai. If Buu had been beaten by Gotenks or Gohan, Goku and Vegeta would have remained dead for good.
Obviously in real life sometimes terrible things happen and it can be impossible to see any silver lining. But I find it's always beneficial to see things that way in the cases were it is possible.
And also the importance of rest/balance in work and training, with Goku taking downtime and staying ahead of Vegeta who endlessly grinds it out.
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Matches Malone
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
No matter how far a goal may be, you can reach it with enough hard work.
No matter how good you are, there's always more you can do to improve yourself.
Don't try to surpass others, try to surpass yourself.
No matter how good you are, there's always more you can do to improve yourself.
Don't try to surpass others, try to surpass yourself.
Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
(Biological) Girls don't have a peepee or balls
Uncles are not necessarily good babysitters
Time machines are useless in changing your timeline
If someone gives you candy and not another person with you candy don’t eat it
If your 4 year old is stronger than you at 23, tell your spouse education is useless and people will be big mad if your kid doesn’t live to his potential.
Uncles are not necessarily good babysitters
Time machines are useless in changing your timeline
If someone gives you candy and not another person with you candy don’t eat it
If your 4 year old is stronger than you at 23, tell your spouse education is useless and people will be big mad if your kid doesn’t live to his potential.
- ABED
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
There's always someone better than you out there.
Never stop learning and growing.
Hard work is important, but so is rest.
Never stop learning and growing.
Hard work is important, but so is rest.
The biggest truths aren't original. The truth is ketchup. It's Jim Belushi. Its job isn't to blow our minds. It's to be within reach.
"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take - Wayne Gretzky" - Michael Scott
Happiness is climate, not weather.
"You miss 100% of the shots you don't take - Wayne Gretzky" - Michael Scott
Happiness is climate, not weather.
- Metalwario64
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
Goku is just like Trump: grabbing girls on their crotch.
"Kenshi is sitting down right now drawing his mutated spaghetti monsters thinking he's the shit..."--Neptune Kai
"90% of you here don't even know what you're talking about (there are a few that do). But the things you say about these releases are nonsense and just plain dumb. Like you Metalwario64"--final_flash
"90% of you here don't even know what you're talking about (there are a few that do). But the things you say about these releases are nonsense and just plain dumb. Like you Metalwario64"--final_flash
- KBABZ
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
Never assume you're the best. If someone's talking the talk, MAYBE they can walk it too. Take every opponent seriously and treat them with respect.
That's Roshi actually; Goku grew out of that, unlike the other two.Metalwario64 wrote: Mon Feb 03, 2020 4:00 pm Goku is just like Trump: grabbing girls on their crotch.
Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
• Do not care about or mention a relative to your family until it is convenient.
• Put others in danger/risk their lives to test their competence.
• Leave your family to live with a stranger (probably for years).
• Commit suicide multiple times (and make sure one of them is in vain).
• Knock your kid unconscious and punch another one in the stomach.
• Let the fate of the Universe in the hands of kids.
• Destroy the moon and expect no consequences to the planet itself.
• Make an individual stare into an hourglass and wait for him get angry enough to kill everyone.
• Close your eyes and refuse see your apprentice losing himself.
• Do something you are not supposed to - get to know you were not supposed to do it - do it again and expect no consequence.
• Get yourself a best friend and expect him to die countless times.
• Let your four-year-old kid fly around the world. Then take them (now as ten years old) to a trip through the Universe.
• Do not see or talk to your friends or family for years.
• Seek revenge no matter how many millennia have passed.
• If you are some sort of "cop", do not arrest anyone comitting such crime. Do not appear where the criminal is at all.
• Even if you are a god, let evildoers do whatever they want in your Universe.
There are certainly more but these are the ones off the top of my head I learned by watching and loving Dragon Ball. Hope it serves an inspiration for someone.
Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
Ask the gods that your son is friends with to communicate to your dead husband that he has a second child on the way and to let them use the Dragon Balls to restore him to life.
Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
But in practicality, ur friends turn into foes in matter of seconds. How's that?Polyphase Avatron wrote: Mon Feb 03, 2020 3:02 pm If you try hard enough, your enemies can become your friends.
I've never considered DB to be Bible or such to educate mankind. Or educate it's viewers. Dat being said, there's some resemblances to real-life events dat resonates with me
Of how Goku being strongest, universally renowned martial artists & Saiyan trained by God's themselves is basically unknown to humans on the very planet he's sacrificed himself countless time to protect...dude never existed to them....however, with enuf publicity & marketing Mr. Satan became Earth's mightiest hero.
But Goku has never allowed that fact to bother him. He does what needs to be done. And he keeps pushing his limits. Which in the eye of others, seems selfish. Then again, there's saying " please everyone & you'll never live a happy life" & Goku as far as I've known has always been a happy guy with pure heart & mind
- It_Is_Ayna_You_Flips
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
Never leave an old man alone with a sixteen year old girl.
My opinions suck. You should probably mute me to spare yourself having to see them.
"If someone gets Star Wars wrong? Death threats. If a kid learns that a shitty song they liked when they were 12 was a cover of a song made in 1984? Death threats. If someone makes a Sonic game that's too dark and edgy? Death threats. If someone makes a Sonic game that isn't too dark and edgy? Death threats. If someone criticizes Naruto? Lots of death threats. Sexualizes pokemon? UNIVERSAL PRAISE." - Plague of Gripes
"If someone gets Star Wars wrong? Death threats. If a kid learns that a shitty song they liked when they were 12 was a cover of a song made in 1984? Death threats. If someone makes a Sonic game that's too dark and edgy? Death threats. If someone makes a Sonic game that isn't too dark and edgy? Death threats. If someone criticizes Naruto? Lots of death threats. Sexualizes pokemon? UNIVERSAL PRAISE." - Plague of Gripes
- SupremeKai25
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Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
Let two people duke it out in the streets because you're not a police officer and it's not your job to intervene.
Akira Toriyama, DBS vol.4 joint interview with ToyotaroAt his core Zamasu is good like Shin, though I guess you could say he was so fastidious that it backfired. But you know, for this "Future Trunks Arc" you had to depict Zamasu and Trunks' inner conflict, right? If this was back when I was drawing the manga myself then I doubt if I could have done it. I mean, I'm not very good at depicting the characters' psychology on the page. So this all came together because now I only have to think up the story. [...] On my own, I doubt I would have been able to express Zamasu's fall to the dark side.
Re: Life lessons taught in Dragon Ball?
- Who you are born doesn’t define who you are.
- Arrogance is for fools. Never think you are the best at doing something, because there’s always someone better.
- Hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard enough.
- Never compete with others: compete with yourselves.
- Always be better than what you were yesterday: there’s no endgame in self-improvement.
- Perfection doesn’t exist.
- Past mistakes are not life sentences.
- Never lose hope, no matter how dire the situation might seem.
- Arrogance is for fools. Never think you are the best at doing something, because there’s always someone better.
- Hard work beats talent when talent doesn’t work hard enough.
- Never compete with others: compete with yourselves.
- Always be better than what you were yesterday: there’s no endgame in self-improvement.
- Perfection doesn’t exist.
- Past mistakes are not life sentences.
- Never lose hope, no matter how dire the situation might seem.
悟 “Vincit qui se vincit”
What I consider canonical
What I consider canonical
Spoiler:







