Going off on a tangent, I believe that Confucianism is the philosophy that leads one to the sanest and equanimous society, which then leads to happiness and joy. — Wallows
the person who responds to calamity and disaster and loss and abandonment wiht a shrug on his shoulder — god must be atheist
happiness occurs when a chance event turns out to be more rewarding than expected. — god must be atheist
What are your thoughts about equanimity? — Wallows
Equanimity (Latin: æquanimitas, having an even mind; aequus even; animus mind/soul) is a state of psychological stability and composure which is undisturbed by experience of or exposure to emotions, pain, or other phenomena that may cause others to lose the balance of their mind.
happiness occurs when a chance event turns out to be more rewarding than expected. — god must be atheist
Inside you are waging a war against facets of yourself you cannot acce — Coben
The reasons we get 'disturbed' by experience is because this has worked for us. — Coben
True equanimity would not look equanimous, because you would also accept your own passions, reactions, and expressive self. Buddhists and stoics tend to only accept the outside, not their insides.
Now if you tell this to a Buddhist they will often say, no, I observe my emotions and reactions and accept them.
This is like saying I accept that my baby is angry, but I do not let him move or make a sound related to that anger. — Coben
and at the extreme, the person of true equalimity accepts hunger, thirst, extreme heat or cold, until he dies of starvation, dehydration, or exposure.
Mind you, he may be happy in his life that leads up to dying, and he may be happy during dying. — god must be atheist
the person of true equalimity accepts hunger, thirst, extreme heat or cold, until he dies of starvation, dehydration, or exposure. — god must be atheist
I don't think most stoics and others argue that it is happiness, even happiness is something they want to be equanimous about also. I do think they think it reduces suffering, which is not quite the same thing. And also that it makes one more rational, which I doubt. Obviously in some situations it is good to remain calm, but I think that can happen anyway if one accepts ones emotions. The emotions include fear and fear can make one calm, oddly enough, if your body realizes that noise and freaking out will likely kill or harm you.What I am trying to say is that it is an unproven, and possibly false assumption that equanimity is a state of happiness, and we can only accept that it is, if that is one of our basic premises. — god must be atheist
Steal it.All the above I fully accept. With complete equanimity. In fact, I wish I had thought of saying it, and now I am sad because I had not. — god must be atheist
1. This can be verified by research, or debunked. I demand you do the research, since you suggested this. (I am being an asshole like so many who demand me to do research on every fucking word I write.)I don't think most stoics and others argue that it is happiness, even happiness is something they want to be equanimous about also. — Coben
the person of true equalimity accepts hunger, thirst, extreme heat or cold, until he dies of starvation, dehydration, or exposure.
— god must be atheist
Well, if they actually lost the ability to prefer or even notice any difference in experience. IOW they got no feedback at all about pain and unpleasance, then they would be handicapped and perhaps to death. But in real life they are not ignoring pleasure and pain, just not reacting to it emotionally as much as they can. — Coben
I personally believe that all happiness comes from the acceptance that there is no true happiness. — Filipe
I would happily replace neurotic worrying with equanimity, sure. — Coben
But I also like things more rajasic. — Coben
Sports are unfortunately not so much an issue for me these days, but there also I enjoyed really throwing myself in in ways that do not exhibit equanimity. I don't like killem competition, but competition and striving are all fine. And certainly with love, yes, peaceful moments and times are lovely. But then I want times that do not look and are not experienced as equanimity. — Coben
But in fact you are only accepting what is on the outside. — Coben
I don't know what equanimity means. So I looked up the meaning. It is (more-or-less) accepting good and bad; staying calm; not getting upset; etc. — god must be atheist
And the reason for you to never have to be truly happy is that you require the none happiness to understand happiness and if you know the dark there is no way that you would enjoy living in an all-white room. — Filipe
But, why? Doesn't the Buddhist have a point here? I mean, there's always some bigger fish out there. Not to sound depressive or anything, just a fact of life I suppose. — Wallows
I don't know. I never got the Greek and now the inherited modern obsession with the Olympics or sport or whatnot. I usually just wallow about and eat and sleep. — Wallows
This seems backward. First, one has to understand one's self to be able to engender any sort of non-trivial change. Yes? — Wallows
What do you mean by "disidentify with them"? — Wallows
How? — Wallows
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