Do you think that you made the right decision when you chose to help them or do you regret it? — Average
Bringing up the subject of reciprocation, a good relationship should be able to handle it, or if you decide not to then put it out of your mind because continuing to think about it is only causing you stress. — praxis
What exactly do you have in mind when you mention human nature? My understanding of human history is dominated by warfare. — Average
Bringing up the subject of reciprocation, a good relationship should be able to handle it, or if you decide not to then put it out of your mind because continuing to think about it is only causing you stress.
— praxis
But doesn't a good relationship also include reciprocity? That's where I'm having difficulty. — Tex
I was thinking of it in terms of your well-being. Stoic advice would be to act (bring up reciprocation with the subject of your generosity) or put it out of your mind because continuing to ruminate will only do you harm. — praxis
Would you agree that behavior is influenced by factors like culture? In other words isn't the behavior of an individual connected to what they believe about the world? In my mind some people are more likely to behave in certain ways due to their understanding of reality which is shaped by their environment and upbringing to some degree. I guess this is the nature versus nurture concept. — Average
Herein lies the problem. If you must give, give wisely. Ask questions. I don't know what's your relationship with this person, but if they're family members, then there's your answer -- lack of reciprocity bias because either they feel entitled to your money, or to their mind you just have too much money.I've always given and not asked/implied for anything and have never brought it up ever again. Just gave and that's that. — Tex
It's just my nature to try to understand, or make some sense of, behavior that, in my mind, should be intrinsic in otherwise "normal" people but which isn't. Therein lies the vagaries of human nature I suppose. I chock a lot of thing up to "human nature" but I guess because it personal this time that I'm having difficulty. — Tex
Forgive me for asking but why do you feel bad about having some resentment towards this person? — Average
However, this person has made no attempt to reciprocate my kindness. I'm not well off but I'm doing okay so it's not about the money. It really isn't. What I'm struggling with is trying to understand why someone wouldn't intuitively reciprocate. — Tex
What I keep coming back to is that I know I have helped someone in genuine need and I should feel good about that and end it there. I gave willingly without expectation so why am I having trouble with this? — Tex
I feel that if I bring it up, it will needlessly create tension and a rift with this person that I care about so I'm going to keep my big bazoo shut. — Tex
But this person is still an asshole! — L'éléphant
his reciprocity bias had become neutral — L'éléphant
The windfall he got, that's never your money, so there was never a loss there either. — L'éléphant
Stop seeing or talking to that person. — L'éléphant
I have great respect for this person and I suppose the thought that they could do something that would tarnish that makes me feel I've misjudged the person which calls into question my ability to evaluate. Perhaps. — Tex
Why should reciprocation be expected, is he your property or something? — Garrett Travers
If you didn't have expectation, you wouldn't feeling expectation now. — Garrett Travers
your value of yourself requires the recognition of appreciation from someone else in that case — Garrett Travers
It's a family member, so there's a whole different mindset. The reciprocity bias was never there to begin with. Gratitude is what one expects from a family member. Not reciprocity. That person didn't have gratitude. Very common occurrence. But, let's talk about you. Are you feeling this way because it is actually about the money but you're in denial? Let's say he never got the windfall, but he also never thanked you, and never showed up for your birthday, your most important occasion, or for your funeral. How do you feel now? Would you be as bitter?but I can't shake the feeling that, now that this person has the means, that reciprocity would at least enter the person's mind and then act on it. How could it not, is the question I ask myself. — Tex
No, the person was an asshole even before I started giving money, is what I meant. I also said I don't feel anything when helping that person. So, there's that lack of expectation on my part.Explain this.... How so? Asshole? He asked for money, it was given to him. Do you think that purchased a part of him to be owned and an expectation to behave in a certain way towards the giver of the largesse? — Garrett Travers
I don't think there's much to say about why reciprocity is good. I do something good for you, then you do something good for me and we both benefit. It also builds trust, agreeableness and forms a bond that is mutually beneficial over the long term. This is, if both are playing by the same rules. — Tex
Maybe I'm naïve, but it seems to me that it would be a "normal" person's inclination to reciprocate. Keep in mind, I'm not talking about a stranger or random charity. — Tex
No, I just think it's not unusual to believe that someone you know would be nice to you after you've been nice to them. — Tex
Gratitude is what one expects from a family member. — L'éléphant
No, the person was an asshole even before I started giving money, is what I meant. I also said I don't feel anything when helping that person. So, there's that lack of expectation on my part. — L'éléphant
But, let's talk about you. Are you feeling this way because it is actually about the money but you're in denial? — L'éléphant
Let's say he never got the windfall, but he also never thanked you, and never showed up for your birthday, your most important occasion, or for your funeral. How do you feel now? Would you be as bitter? — L'éléphant
As it happens, I have a brother that hasn't work in almost 15 or so years, who has been living high on the hog for over a decade now, living off the copious amount of money his unemployed Seminole Indian sperm receptacle gets from the Casino supported Commune in Florida for doing nothing other than breathing. He has never offered to help me even when I was homeless, I couldn't care less. — Garrett Travers
As if any human has a justified claim on my money, which is my labor, which is my behavior, which is my brain, which is me. I reject this kind of evil, as it goes by a name: slavery. — Garrett Travers
Gratitude is what one expects from a family member. Not reciprocity. — L'éléphant
Are you feeling this way because it is actually about the money but you're in denial? — L'éléphant
Let's say he never got the windfall, but he also never thanked you, and never showed up for your birthday, your most important occasion, or for your funeral. How do you feel now? Would you be as bitter? — L'éléphant
Very common occurrence. — L'éléphant
What would qualify as a justified claim in your view? — Average
Like hell you don’t care. There’s a lot of anger and resentment in your choice of words here. — Possibility
Liar! Or you're a school of fish! Gratitude is a common knowledge. :smirk:Why? I expect no such thing from anyone, least ways family members, as those are the most arbitrary relationships in one's entire life. I never did understand this. — Garrett Travers
That's what I get, too, from his post.Like hell you don’t care. There’s a lot of anger and resentment in your choice of words here. — Possibility
You're mistaking necessity for sufficiency in reasoning. Reciprocity is sufficient to show gratitude, but showing gratitude does not necessarily contain reciprocity. I'll give you an example: We show gratitude to our parents for raising us. But this gratitude is never a reciprocity in the sense that we do perform an act in exchange to make it a mutual benefit. A true reciprocity is between friends extending a favor and returning a favor. Another example is a business deal.Not to beat a dead horse or parse words, but I think reciprocity would be included as a way to show gratitude. That's just the way I think I guess. — Tex
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