We only complain because we care. — StreetlightX
How could coping be self-refuting? — Janus
The tension I think you're identifying comes about when also considering coping to mean something like: resigning oneself to the way things are. — csalisbury
Sorry, it might not have been that clear.
What I was trying to point to is that "adequate" seems at first glance to be a normative (intersubjective) standard, but that asking the question "adequate for what' allows you to think of it in terms of your own subjective measure of adequacy, in accordance with your own goals. — Janus
Anyone try microdosing LSD? — Metaphysician Undercover
Also, "adequate coping" must be recognized to be a normative standard; it begs the question 'adequate for what?'. — Janus
I suspect that your depression is getting worse since you have contaminated your wonderfuly capable and kind brain with this muck. — Marcus de Brun
YOU DO NOT NEED TO DISIDENTIFY WITH YOURSELF — Marcus de Brun
The solution is not to create a meta-meta-cognition but rather to collapse the first meta-cognition upon the primary dialogue between self and reality, and this can only be effected through guided or self directed introspective analysis of the self. (Not necessarily of the Freudian variety) — Marcus de Brun
Do you really wish it were easy? — Wayfarer
Personally, I don't think that depression is motivating enough, particularly if medicated, I think that one has to succumb to feeling worse before they can feel better. Their situation must become intolerable, or why else bother to change? Maybe one has to be faced with "die or change" for real change to occur... but it seems that most don't live or die, they just float. — All sight
Practical steps - get physically active and fit, find a fitness coach or a program of action. Also some life coaching might be beneficial. Don't spend time thinking about it 'gee I wonder what that would be like'. You know the Nike ad: Just Do It. — Wayfarer
It's not straightforward at all! It's a deep challenge, and I'm not expecting a quick answer here, or in general.
How could someone tell me about a feeling they refuse to have? — unenlightened
That's not apathetic, that's making yourself comfortable in your misery, and that's why it's tolerable. At the risk of provoking some feeling in you, I will point out that it is self-indulgent. — unenlightened
The question I tend to ask someone who is depressed is, 'what are you depressing? — unenlightened
So here is a safe exercise, that requires no therapist or equipment, and which does the opposite of what everyone else is telling you. Find a quiet place, lie on the floor, and pretend to be dead. Feel the intensity of depression; nobody cares, least of all you, that you are lying dead in some corner. Life goes on elsewhere, and nothing is happening to you. My own experience is that it takes about 20 minutes of being dead to arrive at a definitive 'bugger this, I've got better things to do'. It might take you longer or shorter. Then go and find someone to talk to and care about. — unenlightened
Buddhism often has quite a lot to say about such forms of mediation in which one makes all experiences that which one in some apprehends as an awareness—thereby experientially establishing the given awareness as ontologically independent of all which it otherwise will be constituted at any particular moment as a “self”. Note that within Buddhism, this is intended to be transformative in what one construes to be ontological, to be real, in regards to personal being. It is after all part and parcel of the ontological position of Buddhism. This process of meditation, however, is neither quick nor easy. It requires effort and perseverance. — javra
Yes, that's probably true. — Janus
But even in saying that, you're setting yourself up to not succeed. It's almost like you want to believe it. Just saying. — Wayfarer
I guess there's a difference between dis-identification in the sense of not identifying with some definition of ourselves; as a depressive, a set of symptoms, a process of suffering or whatever, and dis-identification in the sense of gaining an insight into compulsive negative thought patterns that we have been to identified with to be able to see what they have been doing to us. — Janus
I think part of the mental knack is being able to develop some detachment from it - which I know must be a lot more difficult from inside the condition that from outside it. — Wayfarer
I'm not sure how you are thinking about it, but I would have thought the depression just is the "set of symptoms" and that you are neither that nor those, nor the compulsive patterns of thought which may be giving rise to them. You are the one suffering, or put another way, you are more than merely the set of symptoms, depression and suffering. — Janus
You mean that in your experience, in your particular case, it has proven to be too entrenched to treat with disidentification? But what of the possibility that you haven't tried hard and/or consistently enough? (I'm not saying you haven't, but I'm just asking the question). — Janus
No, it's not offered as a cure for you. It's a cure for a shitty world - a shovel and a lot of work. — unenlightened
What I am down on is the mask of scientism; and in particular the claim that the efficacy of practice demonstrates the truth of theory. — unenlightened
But personally, I do not advocate for it; I advocate for facing the horror that pervades one's being and the world, and doing one's negligible bit to ameliorate it. — unenlightened
In the long run I've just concluded: I have a melancholy disposition, and the way things have turned out seem to demonstrate how right I was to be melancholy. — mcdoodle
I would add: therein lies a danger of disidentification. Alienation. If you refuse the label you're given when you go into the therapeutic room you'll find yourself isolated, and that itself may not be wise. — mcdoodle
Suppose I said to you that if you believe in Jesus as your saviour, and showed you with statistics that people who believe in Jesus as their saviour are much happier, than those who don't, would you believe in Jesus as your saviour? — unenlightened
And so what it comes down to, without the cloaking of complicated scientific terminology is "think happy thoughts and don't worry whether they are true."
It's all rather depressing, and therefore it must be wrong. — unenlightened
Change the reality. — creativesoul
So, how do you think our ordinary beliefs change? Do they "become other beliefs" or do they merely replace them? — Janus
What happens to the content of ordinary beliefs when you replace them? I'm not clear what this question could even mean, to be honest. — Janus
It seems to be obvious by definition that they do not form consciously. So, I guess they are unconscious, unanalyzed assumptions that we make about our thinking, and what it might do for us, how it might protect us or whatever. Also, what exactly do you mean by "cognitive distortion"? — Janus
