I just discovered this gem http://www.weatherfrom.com/ today.
The weather forecast just got way funnier.
Source: Photopin |
"Everybody is identical in their secret unspoken belief that way deep down they are different from everyone else."We live in a paradox where we all have our own individual emotional natures, yet we are all taught to want the same things to meet those needs. Brown states that:
"To find happiness, you must know how your unique emotional nature responds to things. You must observe and take seriously you own emotional reactions. For it you attempt to fit your emotions to a preconceived standard, you lose touch with yourself and blind yourself to the most important part of yourself -- to what would make you happy."Essentially, there is a cause (i.e., something external that happens) and an effect (i.e., how you emotionally react to that cause). It's crazy to repeatedly try to change the effect because our emotional nature is somewhat innate. It's more logical to change the cause -- or, more likely, the environment -- that's causing you misery.
"Your positive emotions are seeds of a tastier life. They're trying to tell you how you can be happy. If you ignore them, suppress them, or deny them, you lose the vital guideposts that could lead you toward happiness."Personally, I try to think about the people I admire -- those people I really wish I was. For the most part, they are artists, entrepreneurs, free thinkers, authors, inventors, humanitarians and creators; they are not powerful corporate business men (or women). This exercise creates guideposts that steer me to who I want to be.
"You're in the trap when you continue to do something long after you've stopped enjoying it, or it's something you never enjoyed much to begin with, of if you're bored by most everything you do. [...] If you deny your feelings, all the intelligent thinking and planning in the world won't lead to happiness."We put our own boxes around ourselves and a our possibilities.
"Most social restrictions are self-inflicted. Your life is yours to choose.
[...] You don't have to work at a 'normal' job. You can try your luck at anything. Do you want to be an artist? Tour guide? Gigolo?
[...] You don't have to spend your money on a new car and a respectable home to impress your neighbors, business associates, and friends. Why should you. Let them eat TV dinners in their new cars while you use your money to take the vacation you've always wanted.
Do you want to grow a beard or have longer hair? Do it. If your employer objects, look for a job where it's not a problem. Don't expect your employer to forsake his self-interest for you; but neither is there any reason for you to foresake yours for him."How many times have we put limits on yourselves?
"Freedom is living your life as you want to live it. And you can do that by choosing to do so. You can be free. No one can stop you.
[...] You don't have to reject your own interests and live by someone else's code. You don't have to forsake you own happiness for the benefit of anyone. You don't have to obey the laws that the 'majority' has decided are 'right.' You don't have to follow the leadership of politicians, prophets or philosophers.
You don't have to distort your emotions, tastes, and values to confirm to the 'norms' other things are best for you. You are free to live your life as you want. You could get into your car right now and drive to anywhere you choose. There's nothing stopping you. The only reason not to do that is if there is something better for you where you are now. The demands and wishes of others don't control your life. You do. You make the decisions. And the only standard should be to make the decisions that will bring you greatest happiness"Man, isn't that refreshing?
"The best method of advertising is simply to live the way you want to live."As Ralph Waldo Emerson wisely said:
"Whoso would be a man must a nonconformist"Go out and wave your crazy flag around. Be who you are without regrets. Nonconformists are the only ones really living anyways.
Source: Photopin |
"We cannot, it seems, appreciate what we have for its own merit, or even against what our medieval forebears had. We cannot be impressed by how prosperous we are in historical terms. We see ourselves fortunate only when we have as much, or more, than those we have grown up with, work alongside, have as a friend or identify with in public realm."The problem with this human response is that we'll *always* struggle with comparison because as we rise up the social or work ladder, we are faced with other (more successful) people to compare ourselves to. Therefore, it's not really enough that I work at Google, a company that accepts 0.3% of applicants; I need to perform as well as or better than my peers.
"We envy only those whom we feel ourselves to be like. We envy only members of our reference group. There are few successes more unendurable than those of our ostensible equals."And, although we often think of the move from aristocracy to meritocracy a good thing, it's actually heighten this problem of Status Anxiety:
"In a stroke, it transformed American Society from a hereditary, aristocratic hierarchy -- a sphere in which upward mobility was restricted and a person's status depended exclusively on the lineage and distinction of his or her family -- into a dynamic economy in which status was awarded in direct proportion to the (largely financial) achievements of each new generation."
"We are not always humiliated by failing at things, he suggested; we are humiliated only if we invest our pride and sense of worth in a given aspiration or achievement and then are disappointed in our pursuit of it.""
"With no attempt there can be no failure; with no failure, no humiliation."As the adage goes, self esteem is equal to success divided by pretension.
"To give up pretensions is as blessed a relief as to get them gratified. There is a strange lightness in the heart when one's nothingness in a particular area is accepted in good faith. How pleasant is the day when we give up striving to be young and slender. 'Thank God!' we say, 'those illusions are gone.' Everything added to the self is a burden as well as pride."Unfortunately, it can be pretty challenging to go against the grain and change the denominator. There's so much propaganda around us at work that reinforces the somewhat arbitrary performance system or goals that we might not really care about (i.e., Do I need to be a thought leader? I mean, how about just getting my work done accurately and quickly).
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