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The Buddhist View of Love
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Disassociation
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Self-Knowledge
The spirits of the past have the power to throttle the present – and the wise have always payed them enough attention to loosen their grip and get on with their lives.
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For the Yoruba, agitation isn’t merely an offence to a proper understanding of the universe; it’s also just horribly unfashionable.
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Why does our inner critic exist? Why are they so remorseless? If they are inaccurate, why do they go on as they do?
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Beneath all the turmoil and agitation of relationships, two fundamental anxieties stand out – and help to explain our worst antics and sorrows.
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When we next feel agitated by another person, we might learn to pause and wonder bravely: what if this flaw happened also to be somewhere in me?
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It hangs in a generally ignored room, where it doesn’t shout loudly for humanity’s attention. But if we spend a few moments in its company, we may be cracked open.
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We should resist invitations to argue by recognising them for what they are: attempts by the other party to rescue themselves from unbearable feelings.
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Many of us carry around an impression that others are not especially on our side, may be seeking to harm us – and that we may at any point be attacked, derided or destroyed.
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We may be prone to mental collapse not by random accident, but because we didn’t have the childhoods that would have properly solidified our minds.
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There is a limit to how interested in intimacy anyone can be who skilfully picks out a partner who just happens to have precious little interest in the matter.
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One might want to take leave of a companion not because they are crude, dim or nasty, but because they have revealed themselves to be undeniably and conspicuously ‘nice’. Why might kindness be so hard to bear?
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Automatic writing will not make us into ‘great’ writers; but it will liberate us from some of the insincerities that are making us more troubled and restless than we should be.
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There appears to be an inviolable relationship between remaining alive and not looking at many things too closely. Selective denial may just be the price we have to pay for enduring.
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Faced with the possibility of contentment, many of us manifest a curious preference for despondency. Whatever the opportunities for fulfilment, we stay distinctly loyal to caution, suspicion and fear.
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To become a more interesting person for others, we must first become the best possible travellers inside ourselves.
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A key principle governing the natural world is that animals adapt to thrive in particular habitats. We humans are – in the end, beneath a layer of civilisation – not so different.
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What can appease our troubles is self-exploration. We grow at peace the more we can finally allow ourselves to know who we are; the more we can feel the lives we actually have.
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Though hugs are everywhere, we should not suppose that they are for that matter universally straightforward or inconsequential propositions.
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Preoccupied attachment is simultaneously one of the most despair-inducing of behaviours and one of the most poignant: an acting out of a suspicion that love doesn’t work – which ensures it can’t and won’t.
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Though we all crave love in theory, our capacity to accept it in practice is critically dependent on the quality of our early emotional experiences.
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In order to heal ourselves from our symptoms (and the wounds that lie beneath them), we have to learn to understand ourselves better. How then can we unpick the legacy of emotional wounds?
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We need not continue our loyalty to our past protective strategies once we understood the particular circumstances that once made them so necessary – and that now no longer apply.
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How might we learn to separate out a legitimate aversion for someone from an inhibition about intimacy? By asking ourselves some of the following questions…
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There is almost always a large gap between the moment when divorce is spoken about and when the fuel for it started to accumulate.
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Whenever we see a struggling adult, without necessarily understanding much of their story, we can hazard a guess: somewhere long ago, there was a shortfall of love.
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We shouldn’t be shocked if we need to divert an unholy degree of time to unpicking the early years. We should make a graceful accommodation with our emotional knottedness and take all necessary measures to address it.
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That the task of self-knowledge is fated to remain incomplete is no argument against it; it is the dedication that counts.
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We may never be able to empty the unconscious entirely, but the more we can drain it of its evasiveness, the less nervous and inwardly compromised we will feel.
Self-Knowledge
Developing an understanding of the way Mechanisms of Defence work won’t magically save us from reliance on them but it may give us an inkling of what we are up to, and increase our tolerance to insight.
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We have no alternative but to go to our deaths having understood only a fraction of who we have been. We are – each one of us – fated to be laid to rest in an at-least-partially unknown grave.
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We don’t need to be poets or artists to digest our experiences more thoroughly, but we can learn from these disciplines about how to study the world and preserve its most valuable moments.
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The sad part is why the fault finder came to be this way: because someone else constantly and intolerably found fault with them.
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Our minds may grow less consumed by obsessive thoughts the more we can interpret our preoccupations as symptoms of other concerns we are in flight from;
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The beauty of psychotherapy is that we will without trying end up rehearsing around the therapist many of the same peculiarities as we manifest in the world outside.
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A proper understanding of our situation cannot be complete without considering the highly peculiar era in which we exist. We are troubled in part because we dwell in highly unbalanced times:
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The more we understand of ourselves, the more we necessarily reach a humbling realisation: most of what we condemn in other people is present in ourselves.
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Our lives are often less than they could be because we are – strangely – too good at making things just about bearable for ourselves.
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We might define mental illness as a failure in the capacity to be kind to oneself. This gives us a clue as to the likely cause of this form of suffering: a deficit of love.
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To know ourselves properly is to learn to separate out a problem that manifests in the mind from one that is caused by the mind.
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Our sexual fantasies may shed considerable light on themes in our lives; they may hold the clue to central, challenging aspects of our biographies.
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When our conscience has done everything it can to alert our minds, it has a tendency to set to work on our bodies. Lack of awareness returns to haunt us as physical ailments.
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All love involves compromise, but this truism masks that not all compromises are equally legitimate or fair.
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The process of locating a partner to love is so hard, it may for a long time disguise a more complicated reality: that whatever we claim, it would be a lot easier for us if we never found them.
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Few of us explicitly sign up to a belief in the occult art of mind reading. Nevertheless, we often behave exactly as though we do.
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We don’t want someone to worship us. We need someone to do something far more difficult: see us as we are and still keep faith.
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Successful relationships may require us to be – far more often than we’d like – substantially affected, stilted and unnatural.
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We will be past defensiveness when every nagging insecurity has been pulled squarely into the centre — and there examined and defused.
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We don’t need people to be perfect; we need people to know they are imperfect and then not to blame us for our grief and irritation at finding them so.
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One reason why relationships are valuable is that they enable us to know ourselves better; being part of a couple can help us to understand who we are.
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There are certain parents who – in private – rely on their children to satisfy a range of emotional needs: the need to feel powerful, to have an audience, to play a role, to exist.
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Why do we seem to delight in inflicting suffering – or, even more strangely, to take satisfaction in enduring it?
Self-Knowledge
The most fruitless and counter productive behaviours of adulthood all reveal a logic, once we cease to search for this logic in the present.
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The fragile parent will turn against the child for reminding them of insufficiencies they are secretly in flight from in themselves.
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Liberation awaits us if we have the courage to ask a deceptively simple yet pointed and mind-expanding question…
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The route to satisfaction lies in vigorously pushing thoughts of ourselves aside for a while in the name of trying to make others less afflicted.
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We might take an unusual test that seeks to probe at the more dignified and generous reasons one might have for being lonely.
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We might outgrow a friend precisely because they have fulfilled their brief perfectly.
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We need to battle the fatefully modest part of our minds that reads our isolation as a selective punishment. What holds true for us must and will hold true for others
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We start to properly value our friendships when we grant that they are often every bit as tricky as our most meaningful love stories.
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In a world where everyone seems to talk past one another, to genuinely listen is one of the most constructive and warm-hearted things we can ever offer another person.
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Real friendship is not so much threatened by disclosures of vulnerabilities and compulsions as built out of them.
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At its worst, teasing means mocking things another person can’t do anything about. But there’s a more artful, adult version, in which humour is recruited to sweeten the task of correction.
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We don’t need to stop talking to friends, but if we really want to grow close, we might also need to start doing something with them – preferably laundry.
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We may seek in friendship to correct our imbalances of character; to locate in another the missing piece of ourselves.
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Friendship ends up delivering the intimacy and security of romantic relationships without the jealousy, control, exclusivity and foul temper.
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Those most suited for company will probably have spent a lot of time by themselves.
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We should not be discouraged by the monstrous scale of our forgetting. There is much that we can do to infer crucial things from the past.
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It’s a long and arduous game we play with others, pretending not to be mad. We would be so much wiser to give up the act and square up to the truth
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Outward life continues to demand forbidding levels of conformity. The life of the spirit, revealed in the imaginings of religions and mythologies, points us in more diverse directions.
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Self-Knowledge
We are in our essence and should always strive to remain cry-babies, that is, people who intimately remember their susceptibility to hurt and grief.
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This small sentence, in which so much wisdom is compressed, can helpfully jolt our minds into greater ease. Nevertheless, we are left with a question: if a fear is not a fact, what is it?
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It isn’t necessarily difficulty that sinks us; it’s misconceived notions of what a task should legitimately demand.
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Time must at least theoretically offer us the potential for degrees of maturation and insight to which the young are inherently, through no fault of their own, denied.
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We hear so much about the loneliness we feel without others; but far too little about the loneliness we have to suffer with the wrong sorts of people.
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What leads us to keep repeating a story isn’t that it’s challenging to begin with, but that we’re not managing to alter how it ends.
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The opposite of goodness isn’t evil, it’s sanctimony: the belief that wickedness could, through sufficient shaming and hectoring, one day be magically be expunged from the species.
Relationships
Many lies exist for a noble reason: people are continually trying to shield one another from pains that would devastate them if they saw things as they are.
Self-Knowledge
We are malleable creatures of mood who dare to mistake themselves for people of conviction.
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We’re among the first people who have been able to take our childhoods as seriously as they need to be taken – and to have had the intellectual strength to locate most of our adult ills in them.
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We never set out to be such inveterate exaggerators. It’s just that no one ever showed us that there might be another, more bearable way to be.
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We are worrying about everything, continually, in order to stop ourselves from understanding, and feeling sad about something specific in our pasts. Anxiety has grown into an alternative to self-knowledge.
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To have any chance of one day reaching something substantial, we may need first to give up all hope that we will ever in fact do so.
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We know deep down that crushes are a demented illusion, but it is not always entirely realistic or mature to try to live as though we should never daydream.
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Intuitively, we know that music can heal but rarely is it asked to do so as directly and explicitly as it has been here. These extraordinary musical pieces carry the listener on a representative journey from psychological distress to understanding recovery and liberation.
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