Yes, to some extent, but not completely or you might be considered to be God.
Some examples: If you jump into the Atlantic at some great distance from land, especially in the dark, then you have decided that your fate is to die.
If you hoped that your fate might be to be a doctor of medicine, then your fate (whether you succeeded or not), would depend upon how much hard work you were willing to put in.
In his poem "Fate," Narendra Kuppan uses a variety of literary elements to portray the theme that only you can decide your own fate. One of the bigger ones is his use of an extended metaphor with the whole poem as He compares life to a game, fate as the umpire, and you as a player. He implies that we decide our own fate through the abundant use of repetition in how the umpire, or fate doesn't control you, as you are the player and you control your own actions, and the umpire just calls it as he see's it. "In your Play Fate is not a True Umpire But how you played in your Game is later said as your Fate." He also suggests through this extended metaphor that you can't blame other people for your own actions, in other words, you can't blame the umpire and say it's a bad call when you are clearly responsible. "But Fate is not which makes you Play But you Play and say it is Fate." You are solely to blame for your own mistakes because only you are in control of your action, "Fate does not decide your play Because, you are the one who play."
Yes and no, a convicted person can either choose to be heard by a judge or jury. That means by what ever you choose either the judge will decide your fate or the jury will decide your fate. in some cases only a judge can decide what happens to you.
Yes and hopefully that never changes
as long as anybody else. let fate decide that
i dont now ask one
Munich
Paris, Prince of Troy
Today... No haha. That's for fate to decide. Sorry!
waiting for the first nation to decide his fate
Colonies of settlement were able to control their own future and fate which meant they could grow their own industries. Colonies of exploitation did not have the luxury of controlling their own fate.
Jean-Paul Sartre believed that individuals have to create their own fate and not rely on God.
Yes, they write their own material.