So, essentially...
I have depression, and not, I am depressed.
The short and simple answer to this threads musings. — Posty McPostface
So it is a real question, how essential to your being is depression? — unenlightened
But there must also be people who desperately want to lose something of themselves, tics, depression, anger, gender, weight, ego ... is this dis-identification? — unenlightened
And then, as creativesoul suggests, there is a question of whether one can be content with one's misery - a self-satisfied depressive. — unenlightened
It might be a pose. It might be that no one can be content with their own being short of enlightenment. — unenlightened
There's a film that addresses this question in relation to manic depression, but I forget the name. — unenlightened
So the language of being and having makes a division in what is more a continuum from inner to outer. — unenlightened
So, I think disidentification can be a useful tool; but, where we have endogenous substrates afflicting us, such as depression or anxiety, it can be too much to ask for to create some schism in the mind of what is or is not us. "I have depression vs I am depressed." Is there really any difference at all? — Posty McPostface
The term detachment seems like a good plan here. — Jake
Does this work for you?
1) If we're hungry, eat.
2) If we're tired, rest.
3) If thinking is making us nutty, take a break from thinking. — Jake
In a soldier's stance, I aimed my hand
At the mongrel dogs who teach
Fearing not I'd become my enemy
In the instant that I preach
My existence led by confusion boats
Mutinied from stern to bow
Ah, but I was so much older then
I'm younger than that now. — His Bobness
Does this work for you?
1) If we're hungry, eat.
2) If we're tired, rest.
3) If thinking is making us nutty, take a break from thinking.
— Jake
I keep reading it over and thinking about it, and nothing happens at all. :razz: — unenlightened
There used to be a kid's tv program with the theme tune "why don't you turn off the tv set and do something else instead." It was very popular... Now we have fdrake here telling us to get off the internet, and you telling a philosophy forum to think less. — unenlightened
I would propose that a "schism in the mind" is pretty much the definition of the human condition. Everybody experiences a division between the thinker and the thought. It is that perceived division which allows us to argue with ourselves, ie. be unhappy. That perceived division is generated by thought itself, thus it's not possible to overcome it with any collection of thoughts, however clever or insightful etc they may be. — Jake
The term detachment seems like a good plan here.
— Jake
Do you think you can become detached from your feelings? — Posty McPostface
Like the Stoics did: by not believing every feeling or thought that occurs, no matter how intense. And having simple awareness of passing feelings while attempting to avoid getting stirred up by them. But if that happens, one notices it, forgives it, and lets it go. Over and over til the end of time! :grin: — 0 thru 9
I don't think it's good to live as a Stoic — Posty McPostface
...and you telling a philosophy forum to think less — unenlightened
I see it as telling a philosophy forum to think this through to to the logical conclusion. — Jake
the problem really is the content, not the act of thinking itself. Consider your example of surfing in the wave. This activity doesn't make the thinking go away, it forces the content. — Metaphysician Undercover
The Stoics would have a hard time living in our modern age. Everything is vying for your attention. I don't think it's good to live as a Stoic or try and live as one in our modern age given how precious our attention is and hard to live with so many things out of our control. — Posty McPostface
Not only is suffering made of thought, but so is happiness. — Metaphysician Undercover
Contrary to what you claim, the problem really is the content, not the act of thinking itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
Shall we say, then that, there is a kind of thought that creates the thinker, as part of, the centre of, thought - call it identifying thought, and a kind of thought that is purely external, about the world, about the present, that does not add to the suffering self? — unenlightened
If the suffering person won't take simple straightforward readily available steps to at least improve the situation modestly, then they have learned something very important. They aren't actually that serious about their suffering. This may be an unwelcome discovery, but it's actually good news to achieve this level of clarity. — Jake
This is called 'depression' in the trade. — unenlightened
Shall we say, then that, there is a kind of thought that creates the thinker, as part of, the centre of, thought - call it identifying thought, and a kind of thought that is purely external, about the world, about the present, that does not add to the suffering self?
I think that is the joy of the surfer, or the musician, that she is fully present, remembering the tune, and where she is in it, but concerned with the expression of this note, and unconcerned about the missed note in the last section or the difficult passage coming up. I wonder if it is possible to do philosophy like that? Thinking it through to the logical conclusion but unconcerned with the conclusion? — unenlightened
THINKING: If thinking is nourishing our life, ok, let's think. When thinking starts generating suffering, we can take break from thinking. — Jake
If that was true then we would have long ago stumbled upon the correct thought content and we'd all be happy. What we see instead is that suffering in one form or another, to one degree or another, is universal property of the human experience. This clearly points to the source of suffering being something that we all have in common. — Jake
We don't have to be enemies, because I'm not disagreeing with you. — unenlightened
I'm merely pointing out that good advice that would work if it was taken is not taken because the problem prevents it, — unenlightened
The problem is that the future is always oppressing us — Metaphysician Undercover
it is clear that thinking is not the source of suffering. — Metaphysician Undercover
You’re the whole world. You are everything, all mass and all energy... everything you see, everything that is... that is your true bottomline identify. — 0 thru 9
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