My point was suicide is more than the act of suicide- it is about the ideation. It is about living despite not liking its premises. That is prolonged suicide. It is not something to be dropped- a "cure" must be had to get into the circle of mild life-affirmation (well-adjusted in psychological jargon?). — schopenhauer1
I can only offer advice about coping with depression. Unfortunately, it never goes away, the thought patterns are deeply embedded. There are always alternatives though. Such as ketamine therapy or SSRI's. Some people are adamant about dealing with depression and try other venues like psilocybin or DMT, and can have breakthrough experiences. — Posty McPostface
But that's the point.. — schopenhauer1
It's a form of realism that is self-serving and justifying. You have to reach a cognitive dissonance that these feelings are unwarranted by your situation in life. Once you reach that cognitive dissonance, you can escape from the depression. — Posty McPostface
we don't like the premises of life and go through it nonetheless dealing with it along the way. — schopenhauer1
Perhaps it is seeing things how they are, but still coping with it. — schopenhauer1
I guess the complexity is in that finding of a story. — macrosoft
The "way things really are" is that nobody at that age really knows what they're talking about, for very understandable reasons. And it doesn't get a whole lot better as they proceed in to middle age and beyond either. — Jake
Indeed. Some people are good at that, and others not so much, like everything else. Huge brained profound philosopher grand thinker peeps like us often have problems with stories, because we tend to ask too much of them. Simpler folks tend to have simpler stories which are easier to manage. — Jake
Huge brained profound philosopher grand thinker peeps like us often have problems with stories, because we tend to ask too much of them. — Jake
It is this cognitive dissonance that I am suspicious of. Is it a mood or an evaluation on life? Why is that evaluation bad or wrong? Perhaps it is accurate. — schopenhauer1
It is this cognitive dissonance that I am suspicious of. Is it a mood or an evaluation on life? Why is that evaluation bad or wrong? Perhaps it is accurate. — schopenhauer1
What is the insight people are supposed to get over time? — schopenhauer1
Human beings typically require a story to live within. Sometimes finding a story we like can be challenging. But then things happen, and life goes on. Until it doesn't. Not so complex after all. — Jake
But you don't like it because it doesn't create a space for you to play the role of profound expert. Ok, you are not obligated to like it, no problem. — Jake
We tell ourselves stories about life? — schopenhauer1
It seems more helpful to work on building a better relationship with our story, whatever it might be. You know, the meaning story in our lives might be thought of as a friend, whom we've learned to not take too seriously. — Jake
Is it really your experience that "we are always lacking"? This seems to be true only from an addictive mindset. — matt
Yes aren't we satisfied after a hearty meal? We're not "always" lacking. — matt
We are always lacking, and this is the root of his philosophy, in my opinion. It is what I describe as the "structural suffering" — schopenhauer1
The ameliorative efforts are always an ad hoc effort in Western culture.. try meditating more, simplicity/minimalist movement, mindfulness.. these are all bandaids on a bigger issue. — schopenhauer1
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.