17 Times That Prove Patrick Star Was The Smartest Character On Spongebob Squarepants
by N/A, 9 years ago |
3 min read
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If you watched Spongebob Squarepants at one point or another when you were younger (and if you didn't, shame on you), then you know how things were. Spongebob, a resident of the beloved Bikini Bottom and expert griller at the local burger joint, The Krusty Krab, would venture through the precarious sea, getting into trouble and makin' memories with his best pal, Patrick Star.
And while Patrick wasn't always known for his profuse intelligence (actually, quite the opposite), he said and did some things that spoke pretty profound truth - truth that cut straight to our core and resounded with us. And when you heard it, you nodded in agreement and said to yourself, "yes damn it, that's exactly right."
1. He knew that class is what separates the boys from the men
2. He spoke blunt truth, but only because he knew you needed to hear it
3. He never let anything keep him down
4. He looked at life through a different lens than the rest of us
5. When he was lost in the chaos and stress, rather than trying to run from it all, he wrestled with his thoughts, and endeavored to make personal growth
6. He had the uncanny ability of being able to see things for what they were
7. He wasn't afraid of trying something new just because he wasn't good at it
8. When he didn't have all the answers, he was still committed to speaking truth
9. He mind was an interstate of brilliant thoughts and ideas
10. He was insatiably curious, with a constant hunger to learn
11. Being multi-faceted, he was always exploring the depths of his artistic abilities
12. He taught us manners and table etiquette before our parents ever did
13. Like a true trailblazer, he was in constant pursuit of the truth
14. He was a man of routine, and he knew how important of a meal breakfast was
15. He was a shrewd and resourceful innovator, like the McGyver of the sea
16. Once he established an agenda, he always stuck to it
17. And best of all, he knew how important it was to be vulnerable
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