quinta-feira, 29 de agosto de 2024

QUE TAL


Jacinto Pujol




Perguntam-nos que tal estás
E respondemos muito bem,
E não é verdade.

Tudo bem, tudo bem, bastante bem,
Obrigado, e tu? Até ao dia em que tudo vem abaixo.

Vimos abaixo sorrindo.

Ninguém diz o que se passa consigo
Porque ninguém o sabe.

Não o diz ao amigo nem ao amante
porque não o diz sequer a si mesmo.

Somos aquilo que calamos.

Somos o que nos dói
e não nos atrevemos a dizer.

Conhece-te a ti mesmo, disseram os antigos.
Nós, os modernos, fugimos dessa tarefa ingrata.

Morremos sorrindo.

Estamos bem. Estamos
sempre melhor do que nunca.


Juan Vicente Piqueras
in, O Quarto Vazio 




The Four Pillars of Stoicism


 


If you understand 
acceptance, awareness, 
action, and antifragility 
you understand Stoicism.


There are a number of ways to start with Stoic philosophy. From understanding the three Stoic disciplines to building everything on top of the principle of living according to nature to deriving Stoic principles from their view of the fundamentals physics, logics, and ethics.

Thinking about the philosophy from different vantage points has myriad of advantages, both practical and theoretical.

In this post, I’ll suggest a simple mnemonic. The four As: acceptance, awareness, action, and antifragility. I don’t claim that this is the 100% accurate way to understand the writings of the Stoic philosophers. But it is valuable frame to get at the most useful aspects of the a practical philosophy.


Stoic Acceptance
Stoic acceptance is about accepting what is outside of what is under one’s control. Human minds are prone towards agonizing over the future or the past. We can spend hours ruminating over completely fictional events. Seneca reminds us to stay in the present. 

What is out of our hands we can accept:

True happiness is to enjoy the present, without anxious dependence upon the future, not to amuse ourselves with either hopes or fears but to rest satisfied with what we have, which is sufficient, for he that is so wants nothing.
When we’re agitated by what is out of our control we’re robbing time from ourselves. We’re distracting ourselves from living according to our values.

Yet it is too easy to desire things that are impossible. 
How do you handle this? 

Marcus Aurelius reminds us:

When you run up against someone else’s shamelessness, 
ask yourself this: 
Is a world without shamelessness possible? 
No. Then don’t ask the impossible.

Importantly, this doesn’t mean suppressing negative emotions. When we fight negative emotions, they may arise with a vengeance. Instead, we can accept that we will experience negative emotions and move our attention to what matters.

In the external and internal world, we can expect that things will go wrong. It will be hard. The Stoic is able to accept hardship and move forward.



Stoic Awareness
Stoic awareness builds on Stoic acceptance. The crucial idea is that it is our mind that causes us suffering. Instead trapping ourselves, we can take responsibility for our thoughts and actions.

When we lack awareness we pay attention to what others think about us, to our status, to externals that are out of our control. These things aren’t the true cause of our suffering however. It’s our value judgements that cause us suffering. We wouldn’t be hostage to what others thought about us if we didn’t believe that it was excruciatingly important. Instead, we should focus on what is under our control, our thought and actions.

Taking control of our thought means embracing reality. We’re prone to add additional value judgements and stories to whatever happens to us. This can be useful, but often it clouds our judgments. We’re especially vulnerable when we forget that our thoughts aren’t objective reality. The Stoic is aware that our thoughts are not reality, that the stories we tell ourselves (whether positive or negative) are often untrue, and that they retain control over their thought.

In the words of Epictetus:

Practice saying to every harsh appearance: You are an appearance, and in no manner what you appear to be.



Stoic Action
The previous two tenants of Stoicism focused on the mind. The discipline of action is about acting in the world. The two disciplines are useless if they aren’t combined with right action. 

Marcus Aurelius tells us to:

Waste no more time arguing about what a good man should be. Be one.

We have control over our character. Over time, through small actions we construct habits. It’s up to us to act wisely, moderately, with courage and justice. How we act isn’t up to other people. We’re accountable.

It can be easy to be distracted by our peers, media, and mental hangups and forget this. This is why Stoic acceptance and awareness are so important for action. But don’t forget that it’s the doing that matters.



Stoic Antifragility
Finally, the Stoics were antifragile. Instead of simply being resilient and surviving the famous Stoics were driven by stressors. This led Nassim Taleb to label the Stoics, “Buddhists with an attitude.”

What antifragility does is it helps us get out of our heads. 
When we’re in the hold of a negative action, instead of asking: 
“how can I make this go away?”, 
we ask 
“how can I use this to drive action?” 
and then we act.

Accepting what we can’t change does matter, but it’s also important to resourcefully pursue the good, whatever the obstacles. Do not lean too far into the side of acceptance.

Each of these aspects of Stoicism: acceptance, awareness, action, and antifragility enforce one another. One can go much deeper into each.

In the end, they are all the same thing.


CALEB ONTIVEROS





segunda-feira, 26 de agosto de 2024

No one’s having sex . . .


Marjot





 “Where should we begin?” 
So often, the answers sound like so:

  1. “We still love each other but we have no sex . . . How do we get the spark back?”
  2. “Sex is really important to me, but it just doesn’t seem important to my partner.”
  3. “We have two kids, two jobs. We’re too busy, too tired, too stressed.”
  4. “My partner is neurodivergent and we have a hard time talking about sex.”
  5. “There’s so much pressure around it. It’s not enjoyable.”
  6. “I’m tired of being rejected.”
  7. “We’re too young to be in a relationship with no sex when, in truth, we both want it.” 


SEX IS RARELY JUST SEX

Sexlessness is often the moment when people come to talk to me about the emotional desert they’re in. 
Talking about sex includes delving into: 

  • Closeness
  • Loneliness
  • Intimacy
  • Trust
  • Body image
  • Wounding
  • Gender roles
  • Feeling remembered and that you matter
  • Desire and being desired
  • Pleasure and permission to feel good

It’s all of that under the word sex. 
There’s always more to the story. 
 

IS THIS NORMAL?

It’s completely normal for people who like sex to go through sexless spells. 
And it’s incredibly common for people to walk into my office claiming that a desire discrepancy is “the big problem” they’ve come to “fix.”

  • First, I encourage them to think of it not as a problem but as an alert that something else is going on.
  • Second, I let them know that we’re going to address both—the obstacles that are keeping them stuck and what sex means for them.
  • Third, I assure them that we’re not only going to talk about the sex they’re not having; we’re also going to talk about the sex they want to be having . . . and that’s a lot more fun. This is especially true if you have tools and exercises that take the pressure off, enable you to plumb the depths of your erotic mind, and teach you how to say what you want—and then ask for more.


LET’S GO DEEPER TOGETHER

I’ve long said that sex is not just something you do; it’s a place you go—inside of yourself and with another or others. 
It is never too late to remove sexual blocks and to become more playful, erotic, and alive.



Let’s Turn the Lens on You

In our sexual preferences lie our deepest emotional needs. 
Where do you go in sex?

  1. Is it a place you go for connection?
  2. For surrender?
  3. For dominance?
  4. Transcendence?
  5. Spiritual union?
  6. Fun?
  7. Is it a place to be naughty?
  8. To escape responsibility and good citizenship?

Take a few moments now to reflect on these questions. 
Write them down, if you’d like.


Esther Perel 



sábado, 24 de agosto de 2024

Solitude


Steve Eason





It was but yesterday I thought myself 
a fragment quivering without rhythm in the sphere of life. 
Now I know that I am the sphere, 
and all life in rhythmic fragments moves within me.

Solitude is a silent storm 
that breaks down all our dead branches. 
Yet it sends our living roots deeper into the 
living heart of the living earth.

The nearest to my heart are a king without a kingdom 
and a poor man who does not know how to beg.

A traveler am I and a navigator 
and every day I discover a new region within my soul.

A hermit is one who renounces 
the world of fragments that he may enjoy 
the world wholly and without interruption.


Khalil Gibran
in, Sand and Foam, A Book of Aphorisms





The Hermit-Prophet

 

Milkovasa





Once there lived a hermit prophet, and thrice a moon he would go down to the great city and in the market places he would preach giving and sharing to the people. 
And he was eloquent, and his fame was upon the land.

Upon an evening three men came to his hermitage and he greeted them. 

And they said, 
"You have been preaching of giving and sharing, and you have sought to teach those who have much to give unto those who have little; and we doubt not that your fame has brought you riches. Now come and give us of your riches, for we are in need."

And the hermit answered and said, 
"My friends, I have naught but this bed and this mat and this jug of water. Take them if it is in your desire. I have neither gold nor silver."

Then they looked down with distain upon him, and turned their faces from him, and the last man stood at the door for a moment, and said, 

"Oh, you cheat! You fraud! You teach and preach that which you yourself do not perform."


Khalil Gibran
in, The Madman




terça-feira, 20 de agosto de 2024

Jupiter Square Saturn – Don Quixote And Sancho Panza






On August 19th, 2024, Jupiter (at 17° Gemini) is square Saturn (at 17° Pisces).

Jupiter square Saturn is a very important transit because it involves the two largest planets in our solar system. So when they form an important aspect like a square (we only have a Jupiter-Saturn every 10 years), we know that we’re up for something BIG.

We are talking about fundamental influences that will challenge and reshape the structure of our lives.

This is the 1st square of the current Jupiter-Saturn cycle, which began in December 2020 when Jupiter and Saturn met at 0° Aquarius.

The 2nd Jupiter-Saturn square happens at 14° Gemini and 14° Pisces and it’s on December 24th, 2024.

The third – and final – Jupiter-Saturn square is on June 15th, 2025 and occurs after Jupiter and Saturn leave Gemini and Pisces and move into Cancer and Aries. At the exact square, Jupiter is at 1° Cancer and Saturn at 1° Aries.

So when we talk about this Jupiter square Saturn transit, we are referring to the whole period spanning from August 2024 until June 2025.

The first square of a synodic cycle is known as a “crisis in action,” meaning that whatever was initiated at the conjunction is now being tested against reality.

You do want to pay attention to the themes that emerge at the time of the 1st conjunction (August 19th, 2024) because will set the tone for the entire transit.

  • What makes sense, and what doesn’t? 
  • What should we continue doing, and what should we reconsider or change?

Squares are also opportunities for “market feedback,” bringing forth various possibilities.

Take a step back and observe how the world validates – or doesn’t – what you do. 
If your efforts yield no results, perhaps it’s time to change your strategy. 
On the other hand, if a particular opportunity keeps presenting itself, it might be time to say yes.

As a general influence, think of Jupiter as your goals and beliefs – how you want your life to be – and Saturn as your results – what is realistically achievable.

When Jupiter and Saturn clash in a square, this suggests there is a gap between what you believe it’s possible, and what can realistically be achieved.

This isn’t always negative. 
Many people dream too small, lacking Jupiter’s confidence and expansive mindset – so they end up with ‘goals’ that fall short of their potential.
For others, the opposite is true. They might dream too big, becoming entangled in unrealistic expectations.

So what’s to be done? 
The goal of Jupiter square Saturn is to: 
1) help us identify what is truly important to us and 
2) recognize the gaps between our ideals and our current situation.

This clarity will then help us take practical steps forward, one step at a time.



The Jupiter-Saturn square 
in Gemini-Pisces 
makes me think of 
Don Quixote and Sancho Panza.


The story of Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, from Miguel de Cervantes’ novel Don Quixote, revolves around the relationship between a deluded idealist (Don Quixote) and his pragmatic, down-to-earth squire (Sancho Panza).

The idealist Don Quixote is, of course, Jupiter, and Sancho Panza is Saturn.

In the novel, Don Quixote sets out on a quest to become a knight-errant, reviving knighthood and fighting for justice. He is the ultimate idealist, traits that remind us of Jupiter.

Sancho Panza is skeptical of Don Quixote’s grandiose visions, but he remains faithfully by his side, providing practical support and grounding Don Quixote’s fantastical visions. Similarly, Saturn’s role is to shape Jupiter’s vision into practical realities.

But the journey or reconciliation is not always smooth. 
Just like the novel explores the tension between Don Quixote’s grandiose imagination and Sancho Panza’s pragmatic realism, the Jupiter-Saturn square can reveal the challenges and friction between our big aspirations and practical limitations.

The famous windmill episode in the novel is emblematic of Jupiter in an Air sign (Gemini).

On their journey, the 2 companions come across a group of windmills.

Don Quixote, with his imagination fueled by tales of giants and heroic quests, mistakes the windmills for giants.

He believes that these “giants” are threatening and that it is his duty to fight them. Despite Sancho Panza’s warnings, he tries to fight the windmills – unsuccessfully, of course -, ending up falling off his horse.

The windmill episode is a metaphor for the clash between idealism (Jupiter) and reality (Saturn). Idealism taken to the extreme can blur our vision and detach us from reality.

But that’s not to conclude that with Jupiter square Saturn we should curb our enthusiasm.

What’s interesting in the novel is that Don Quixote and Sancho Panza need each other
While Sancho Panza is the realistic one, he is very much drawn by Quixote’s sense of adventure, which gives him meaning and direction.

Without Jupiterian goals, Saturn would not know what to do, and would have nothing to fight for.

At the Jupiter-Saturn square, reflect on which character you identify with:
  • Are you the idealistic Don Quixote? If so, how can you bring more practicality into your grand visions?
  • Are you the overly-pragmatic and sometimes too-pessimistic Sancho Panza? How can you embrace bigger dreams and find a sense of direction?

The Jupiter-Saturn square is an opportunity to find the sweet spot between ambition and realism, so you can pursue your goals grounded in reality, while at the same time pushing yourself beyond self-imposed limitations. 



Astro Butterfly



O Homem de La Mancha


Pablo Picasso



 Sonhar, mas um sonho impossível.
Lutar onde é fácil ceder,
Vencer o inimigo invencível,
Negar, quando a regra é vender.

Sofrer a tortura implacável,
Romper a incabível prisão,
Voar num limite improvável,
Tocar o inacessível chão.

É minha lei, é minha questão,
Virar esse mundo,
Cravar esse chão.
Não me importa saber
Se é terrível demais.
Quantas guerras terei de perder
Por um pouco de paz?

E, amanhã, se esse chão que eu beijei
For o meu leito e perdão,
Bom saber que valeu delirar
E morrer de paixão.

E, assim, seja lá como for,
Vai ter fim a infinita aflição,
E o mundo vai ver uma flor
Brotar do impossível chão.


(Trecho de O Homem de La Mancha, 
peça teatral inspirada no livro 
Don Quijote de La Mancha, de
Miguel de Cervantes, 
produzida por Paulo Pontes e Flávio Rangel, 
encenada em 1972-74) 




domingo, 18 de agosto de 2024

Lençóis herdados

 






A mais íntima ferida é herdada.

O onde, o como, o quando,
a morte, o nascimento,
língua, família, deus, tempo, amor:
o decisivo do que nos acontece,
e quem somos,
não é algo desejado nem escolhido.

E passamos a vida, no entanto, ou por isso,
crendo que o desejo é nosso deus,
e não uma rosa rara que em nós cultiva
o azar
que nos guia, nos cega e nos ignora.

Ninguém escolheu o mundo em que nasceu.
Nem sequer seu nome, sua memória.

O importante se impõe, não se escolhe.

E, no entanto, somos seres livres
para escolher entre dar e destruir
o que temos, deseja-lo, ama-lo
mais do que o que não há, lutar sem um mundo,
aceitar o que acontece e trabalhar
duro para que aconteça
o que de qualquer maneira vai acontecer.

Não há mais sabedoria ou remédio
que amar a vida mais do que o seu sentido
e deixar-se levar pelas águas selvagens
de estar aqui e, portanto, com sede de partir,
de escolher o que existe e, ai de nós,
ser quem somos, pródigos, saber
que não temos mais do que o que damos.

Chamamos liberdade a esta tarefa
minuciosa e secreta de bordar,
manchar, romper, lavar, estender, dobrar,
guardar no armário, entre folhas de marmelo,
lençóis herdados da avó
que por sua vez herdou da sua, um estranho enxoval
para essa solidão que me tem algemado.



Juan Vicente Piqueras




When Philosophers Become Therapists

 





Around five years ago, David—a pseudonym—realized that he was fighting with his girlfriend all the time. On their first date, he had told her that he hoped to have sex with a thousand women before he died. They’d eventually agreed to have an exclusive relationship, but monogamy remained a source of tension. “I always used to tell her how much it bothered me,” he recalled. “I was an asshole.”

An Israeli man now in his mid-thirties, David felt conflicted about other life issues. 
Did he want kids? 
How much should he prioritize making money? 

In his twenties, he’d tried psychotherapy several times; he would see a therapist for a few months, grow frustrated, stop, then repeat the cycle. He developed a theory. The therapists he saw wanted to help him become better adjusted given his current world view—but perhaps his world view was wrong. He wanted to examine how defensible his values were in the first place.

One day, a housemate showed him a book called “Philosophy, Humor, and the Human Condition,” by the French Israeli philosopher Lydia Amir. 
Amir, the housemate explained, was his cousin. 

In addition to teaching part-time at Tufts University, she offered “philosophical counselling” to private clients. David had never heard of philosophical counselling. But over the next few weeks he read and enjoyed Amir’s book. He watched an episode of an Israeli current-affairs TV show, “London and Kirschenbaum,” in which she debated the merits of philosophical counselling with the hosts. “She actually looked like she enjoyed it when they tried to take her down,” David said. 

He decided to contact her, and they arranged some online sessions. 
During their first few meetings, “I kind of tested her,” David told me. 
He steered the discussion to abstract ideas from one of his favorite thinkers, the seventeenth-century philosopher Baruch Spinoza. They discussed Spinoza’s ethics and his views on God and the infinite. Amir’s depth of knowledge impressed him, but she was also quick to acknowledge when he made insightful points. He started revealing more about his personal dilemmas.

David worked with Amir for several years, sometimes meeting a few times each week. 
Usually, they discussed a personal issue in his life with the aim of posing a philosophical question. Uncertainty about monogamy, for instance, generated the question “What does freedom mean?” 
Worries about money led Amir to ask, 
“What role does wealth play in a good life?” 

Amir would guide David through multiple philosophical approaches to such questions. 
“Lydia is smart,” he told me. “She just presents you with all kinds of things and lets you see what you connect to. You have a whole bank of knowledge, with thousands of years of experience from philosophers.” 
The sessions were a hybrid between therapy and an academic seminar. 
Between meetings, Amir sometimes gave him reading assignments: Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Hume.

David gradually reconsidered his view of monogamy. 
“Lydia put me in the mind-set of, Let’s imagine you get what you want. Your wife goes off and has ten orgasms with a handsome basketball player. How do you feel? 

Do I really want polygamy for both of us, or do I just want absolute freedom for me combined with control over her?” 

After conversations with Amir about Stoicism, Nietzsche, and other philosophers, he understood freedom in a new way—not as the ability to do whatever he wanted but as a conscious decision to live in a certain way. 

“You can actually make a choice to limit yourself,” he told me. 
“I stopped looking at my wife as someone limiting my freedom. I took responsibility for my choice.”

While we spoke, David, an intense, dark-eyed man, grew excited. 
“So Nietzsche said something cool, right? 
He said that everybody searches for power, but the weak search for it everywhere, while the strong will search in very specific places.” 
David applied this insight in his own life by noticing his drive for power and expressing it more selectively. 

He no longer tried to win every argument or prove that he was right in trivial situations; he and his wife—they married five years ago—began fighting less often. Meanwhile, he focussed on pursuing power in the financial sphere, shifting from a job in digital marketing to commercial real estate.

Amir is one of a small but growing number of philosophers who provide some form of individual counselling. In the United States, two professional associations for philosophical counsellors, the National Philosophical Counseling Association (N.P.C.A.) and the American Philosophical Practitioners Association (A.P.P.A.), list dozens of philosophers who can help you with your problems

Italy has multiple professional organizations for different forms of philosophical counselling, and similar organizations exist in Germany, India, Spain, Norway, and several other countries. 
In Austria, Italy, and Romania, universities offer master’s degrees in the field. 

Everyone should study philosophy, Amir told me; since few people do, she argues that philosophical counselling fills an important need. “If he changed, it’s because he got educated,” she said of David’s transformation. “And he got educated because he wanted a philosophical education. If something good happened to him, it happened because of philosophy, not me. I just enabled the encounter.”



Amir was born in Paris, in 1955, the daughter of a Jewish Holocaust survivor. 
When she was an infant, the family moved to Israel. 
Her father, a diplomat, travelled frequently for work, and her childhood was spent in Israel, France, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Algeria, and Senegal. 
Her mother was a political journalist, and their houses were full of books; when she was seventeen, she found a volume of Plato and became captivated by the dialogues. She initially studied math and philosophy as an undergraduate, at the University of Tel Aviv, but much of her interest in math was philosophical. (What’s “natural” about the natural-number series?) She decided to focus solely on philosophy, eventually writing a dissertation on concepts of personal redemption in Spinoza and Nietzsche.

Amir’s doctoral adviser encouraged her to supplement her theoretical analyses with concrete personal examples, and she recognized two major things in her life that she wanted to change. 
First, she wanted to quit smoking. Though she was writing about personal freedom, she often felt controlled by the pleasure of cigarettes. Most of the advice that she read involved reducing temptation: the idea was to spend less time around other smokers, and to get rid of cigarettes and ashtrays. Amir did the opposite, carrying cigarettes with her everywhere. “I wanted it to be a free choice at every moment,” she recalled. 

“The question was: What kind of vision of yourself do you want to have?”

Amir was also afraid of flying. She’s still afraid, travels frequently, and swears that each flight will be her last. “I’ve accepted that I feel as if I’m going to die before every flight. I don’t try to fight that feeling,” she told me. When she finished her Ph.D., she hadn’t flown in a decade; she concluded, philosophically, that death was preferable to a life in which her freedom was limited by fear, and flew to Paris despite her anxiety. It seemed unacceptable to her to study philosophical ideas of freedom but not to live by them. “I decided that anything is better than to live like that,” she said.

In the late nineteen-eighties and early nineties, Amir taught philosophy at various universities in Tel Aviv and lectured in a continuing-education program for adults. Some of her adult students wanted to talk to her about their personal issues, and she gave them her phone number. They started referring friends. A journalist covered her work, which brought more clients. As more strangers began asking for time, she started charging for private sessions on a sliding scale. (Her current rate is around a hundred and fifty dollars an hour.)

Philosophy is both a natural and a strange resource for helping people resolve the problems of life. Ancient philosophical traditions such as Stoicism and Buddhism focussed on practical ethics and techniques for alleviating suffering, but much modern philosophy seems to aim to express suffering, rather than reduce it. “Life is deeply steeped in suffering,” Schopenhauer wrote. “At bottom its course is always tragic, and its end is even more so.”

“My view is that it’s about thinking,” Amir said, of her counselling work. “It’s not developing skills of listening and being empathic, which philosophers are not especially trained to do. It’s personal tutoring in philosophy.” There is, she claims, “no other discipline that teaches you how to think better when it relates to your life.”

To really understand philosophical counselling, Amir suggested, I would need to try a session. 
As it happened, she’d soon be attending an international conference on philosophical counselling, in Timișoara, Romania. We met in the high-ceilinged atrium of the Romanian Academy near the city’s historic downtown. More than fifty philosophers from over a dozen countries had gathered, and the conference felt like the reunion of a large and eccentric family. Amir spotted me from across the room, but was intercepted by Spanish, Romanian, and American colleagues before she reached me.

I asked about her flight.

“Ah, you remembered,” she said, smiling. “Not good, but I am here.”

We made our way into a small auditorium, where Amir would be giving the conference’s keynote address. Her goal, she told me, was “to get people excited.” Pacing before the lectern with a microphone, she threw some shade on traditional psychotherapists: 
“They cannot offer you ideals. They cannot offer you a world view,” she said. She suggested that philosophy alone was capable of sparking transformation by exposing people to many viewpoints and increasing their capacity to assess them rationally. 
The crowd seemed delighted.

That afternoon, we sat at a table at a restaurant beside the Vega River for an individual session. Amir pushed her long blond hair away from her eyes, took a sip of tea, and asked me what I wanted to discuss. For the past few years, I said, I’d been working on a book; now I was waiting for it to be published, and its fate was mostly out of my hands. I’d always known that its success would be judged partly by its sales. As publication loomed, this fact troubled me more and more. I felt almost queasy when I thought about it.

“Your first book will be published soon, which is wonderful,” Amir said. “Its success may be evaluated based on the sales, which is ridiculous. If it doesn’t sell well, this does not mean it’s not good. But it’s an element you cannot control.”

“Yes,” I said. “That’s about it.”

She took a sip of tea. “So. What is so maddening about not controlling something?”

I thought for a bit. “Well, if you perceive that other things you care about depend on what you can’t control, that can be maddening.”

“Yeah,” Amir said. “But isn’t it usually like that?”

“Like what?”

“With everything. You cannot control that a flight will go right. Then you can lose your life, your leg, your luggage, your wife. Usually, the things we cannot control are not just small things.” She swept one hand through the air, as if to apply the point to the rowers in sculls slicing through the brown river, and to the people in cars buzzing across a bridge overhead. “Now—we have your notion of the uncontrollable. That is something to explore. We have your perception of success. Third would be the relationship between success and the thing that is not controllable.” 
For a while, we discussed different definitions of success. 

Then she turned the conversation to Spinoza. 
“He says that the person who wants to live without fear needs to live without hope
Most people want to have just the bright side of things, without the dark side. But it’s the same coin,” she said, her eyes narrowing. Gaining peace of mind, she suggested, would come at a price. If I achieved detachment, I wouldn’t care if the book sold well.

We were near the end of our hour. 
“My first book was sold out eight months after it was published,” Amir said. “It’s an academic work, but after that I had multiple contracts for future books. I lost something. I became chained to my writing desk. You may think success just means more possibilities, but, once one possibility is realized, many other things are no longer possible. You may look back on these months as a time of freedom.” If I were to undertake more sessions, she said, we would go deeper into these ideas; I might read from Seneca and Epictetus. There was no moment of shattering insight during the session. But, afterward, I felt a pleasant broadening of perspective.

On my second day in Romania, I observed a philosophical-counselling session between Adam Lalák, a thirty-year-old man from Prague, and Lou Marinoff, a seventy-two-year-old professor of philosophy at the City College of New York and a co-founder of A.P.P.A. Lalák had finished a master’s degree in philosophy at Cambridge, then held various private-sector and nonprofit jobs. He was now aspiring to become a philosophical counsellor. Lalák and Marinoff sat facing each other in an empty conference room. Pale sunlight spilled through a high window onto the wood table between them.

“So I turned thirty about a month ago,” Lalák began, stroking his dense blond beard. “And it feels like I have been pulled in two very opposing directions. I’m feeling like this age is bringing a lot of responsibility, like I’m supposed to be grownup and get a job and a family. And I’m feeling like I really want to cut all the bullshit. I want to get to the things which I find very important, which is, for example, philosophy. And philosophy is not very practical.”

Marinoff, who had a salt-and-pepper beard and mobile, bushy eyebrows, held a pen and jotted notes as Lalák spoke. “So this is partly a clash of values,” he said. He asked Lalák about his girlfriend, his parents, his past jobs and future prospects. The crux of Lalák’s dilemma was that he wanted to do something interesting and make a decent living. Both might be possible, but getting a doctorate in philosophy and hoping for the best was financially risky.

“Have you had any encounters with Asian philosophy?” Marinoff asked.

“I like to read the Tao Te Ching, but I haven’t really studied it,” Lalák said.

Marinoff wrote in his notebook. “Wonderful, wonderful,” he said. “I’ve been with that book for fifty years. . . . It’s been a great guide to me, personally, and the I Ching even more so. I’m going to sort of prescribe something that you could read that may help resolve this tension.” The first part of Marinoff’s prescription was Sartre’s essay “Existentialism Is a Humanism,” which Marinoff suggested could be a useful aid in recognizing whether one is acting authentically; the second was the I Ching, an ancient Chinese divination manual. “There’s a Web site that will allow users to consult it online,” Marinoff said. “So what happens is, you get a hexagram by random means. You’ll reach a phrase or a line or a sentence or two, and it will jump off the page and speak to you. And it will tell you what’s in your heart and your mind. It’s reflecting back to you the advice that you need to give yourself in order to take the better way forward.”

Lalák frowned and wrote something in his own notebook. He was mostly quiet as Marinoff reminisced about his youth, spent “doing unspeakable things with electric guitars and motorcycles,” and recommended meditation over psychedelics. I couldn’t decide whether Marinoff reminded me of an eccentric grandfather advising a young relative or a professor oversharing during office hours. After the session, Lalák seemed politely underwhelmed. “The prescriptions didn’t feel that tailored to me,” he told me. “It was more like they were just his favorite books. I wonder if he’d assign the same things if I’d had different issues.”

Later in the conference, he planned to have a session with an expert on existentialism, and another focussed on Socratic dialogue. “It’s not very formalized,” he said. “There are no real methods.” During my time in Romania, I heard philosophical counsellors champion meditation, psychedelics, wine, and knitting, along with ideas from thinkers such as Foucault, Marx, and Aristotle, who themselves would agree on very little. Rick Repetti, an A.P.P.A. member and a philosophy professor at cuny with a private counselling practice, told me that getting philosophers to agree is like trying to herd cats; counsellors certified by A.P.P.A. use everything from guided meditations to targeted explorations of existentialist, Kantian, and Stoic philosophy. The National Philosophical Counseling Association, by contrast, emphasizes a method called logic-based therapy. (Both organizations require members to have a master’s or a doctorate in philosophy in order to become certified practitioners.)

Some think that the practice of philosophical counselling should be more standardized. Others worry that philosopher-counsellors will miss serious mental-health issues. The two major American professional organizations stress that philosophical counselling can’t address certain severe psychiatric disorders, and urge counsellors to refer clients to mental-health providers when their issues do not fit a philosophical scope of practice. 

Angie Hobbs, a professor of philosopy at the University of Sheffield who doesn’t do philosophical counselling, told me that she worries about whether philosophers will know when to make referrals. Lynn Bufka, a clinical psychologist in Maryland who works for the American Psychological Association, said that, as a psychologist with a doctorate, she had needed about four thousand hours of supervised training before she could apply for a psychological-counselling license. “Three days to get the certification, without ongoing supervised experience, would be very concerning for me,” she said, referring to the length of training required by A.P.P.A. On the other hand, some philosophical counsellors frame their work as aimed at resisting the creeping medicalization of life

Living involves many doubts, anxieties, and confusions, and not every perplexity is a pathology; for any human quandary, there’s likely a philosopher who has wrestled with it in the past few millennia. Their insights may not confer the sorts of benefits that randomized clinical trials can study, but they’re potentially profound.

On the last day of the conference, I met Amir for a late lunch. She wanted to convince me that, despite its heterogeneity, philosophical counselling did have a basic essence. All sorts of interventions, from psychedelics to meditation and fortune-telling, had the potential to help someone. But philosophy was different, because it addressed deep human questions about ethics, purpose, and meaning with logical precision. It was an underused resource. 
“Just look at a bookstore,” she said. “You have shelf after shelf of self-help books, and then philosophy will be in some corner where no one goes.”

After lunch, walking through the city, I thought of Wittgenstein, the twentieth-century philosopher. His work on the logical foundations of mathematics can seem impossibly distant from daily life, yet his aim in doing philosophy, he wrote, was “to show the fly the way out of the fly-bottle.” Philosophers can get stuck in the bottles of their own academic specialties. For them, too, philosophical counselling can be liberating—a way of freeing themselves by illuminating a path for others.



Nick Romeo



domingo, 11 de agosto de 2024

The Treasure

 

Mount Everest




Mountains, a moment’s earth-waves rising and hollowing; the earth too’s 
an ephemerid; the stars—
Short-lived as grass the stars quicken in the nebula and dry in their summer, 
they spiral
Blind up space, scattered black seeds of a future; nothing lives long, 
the whole sky’s
Recurrences tick the seconds of the hours of the ages of the gulf before 
birth, and the gulf
After death is like dated: to labor eighty years in a notch of eternity is 
nothing too tiresome,
Enormous repose after, enormous repose before, the flash of activity.
Surely you never have dreamed the incredible depths were prologue and 
epilogue merely
To the surface play in the sun, the instant of life, what is called life? I fancy
That silence is the thing, this noise a found word for it; interjection, a jump of the 
breath at that silence;
Stars burn, grass grows, men breathe: as a man finding treasure says ‘Ah!’ but 
the treasure’s the essence;
Before the man spoke it was there, and after he has spoken he gathers it, 
inexhaustible treasure.



Robinson Jeffers





.................................... eterna insatisfação



Basicamente define-se que 
uma pessoa é insatisfeita quando 
a mesma não consegue 
valorizar e apreciar 
as coisas positivas 
que tem e que conquista.
 
A causa dessa insatisfação permanente está relacionada com uma carência afetiva que parece não ter fim à vista. Na realidade, o ser humano tem sempre uma necessidade de ter mais, de construir mais, mas acaba por se sentir realizado com as pequenas conquistas que vai fazendo e dando lugar a novos sonhos e projetos, ficando satisfeita com o que já tem.
 
Esse é um processo natural que nos move para a procura, para o alimento da curiosidade, para a procura de mais conhecimento e daí por diante.
 
As pessoas satisfeitas conseguem valorizar e evidenciar aquilo que já conseguiram e preparam-se para procurar o passo seguinte. Sentem-se bem com muito menos do que se possa imaginar. Entendem a abundância como tendo o essencial e não perdem tempo à procura dos excessos.
 
As pessoas satisfeitas sabem que, a felicidade se encontra em várias dimensões da vida humana e não somente no dinheiro ou na realização profissional. É gratificante a realização profissional, como é ter um bom parceiro amoroso ao nosso lado, ter conforto condições de higiene, uma vida criativa e tempo para estar consigo mesmo.
 
Para estarmos satisfeitos precisamos de encontrar o bem-estar a esses níveis, sendo que o amor está no topo das prioridades. Quem encontra uma relação estável e feliz tem mais predisposição para estar satisfeito do que quem encontra só a realização profissional.
 
Pelo contrário, as pessoas insatisfeitas provavelmente não têm esse preenchimento emocional e acabam por procurar compensações desenfreadamente nunca encontrando o estado de satisfação; o bem-estar, a mente plena porque se perdem com aquilo que não têm em vez de se concentrarem no que podem ter e vir a conquistar.
 
Para a psicóloga Jaqueline Pitchon, o ser humano é um ser de faltas, pois é o desejo pelo que não tem que o move. O ser humano precisou usar a criatividade para alcançar algo melhor, mas é o exagero disso o problema.
 
Quando a pessoa sente uma falta, mesmo conquistando o que deseja, algo não está bem.
 
Num estudo da psique humana, analisa-se como as carências afetivas se deslocam para outros áreas do nosso cérebro, pelo que, as pessoas podem canalizar essa falta constante de algo, por exemplo, adquirindo hábitos ou vícios preocupantes. Há por exemplo quem transfira a carência emocional para o trabalho, para as compras, para rituais estranhos e daí por diante.
 
A mesma psicóloga esclarece que existe uma diferença entre a insatisfação específica e a generalizada.
“Quando a carência é específica, canalizada para um aspeto da vida, como o amor ou a profissão, representa a frustração sobre uma escolha errada”. 

Por exemplo, a insatisfação no trabalho. Quando a pessoa não se satisfaz com nada, é porque não está satisfeita com ela mesma, que é um dos sintomas da depressão.
 
De um modo geral, é comum encontrarmos crianças com estes sintomas devido essencialmente à carência parental e, ao facto de os pais lhes compensarem a falta de atenção com presentes.
 
As crianças que são educadas e que se desenvolvem num ambiente de insatisfação, tenderão a repetir o que observam em casa, pelo que, é mais uma razão para alterar a nossa forma de estar e de pensar.
 
Ao mesmo tempo, uma pessoa insatisfeita com tudo tem mais dificuldade em fazer amizades, em desfrutar da vida, em progredir e em ser uma boa companhia, o que lhe aumenta a carência, pois acaba por estar sempre afastada desses grupos.
 
O psicólogo Mário Vieira Serra, destacou algumas motivações para a insatisfação constante: problemas no presente;  
  • dificuldades em se focar nas coisas boas do momento; 
  • aprendizagem com os pais ou com quem o educou para a ideia de que a vida deve ser vivida dessa forma; 
  • sonhar com o futuro ideal, sem condições para viver o presente real.
 
O mesmo psicólogo diz que, a pessoa insatisfeita pode estar a passar por dois processos na vida: a insatisfação com ela mesma ou a compulsão por reclamar.
 
Serra esclarece que, a mania de se queixar negativamente pode acarretar problemas para a saúde. O psicólogo explica que: 
"Tendo essa postura, a pessoa vai levar uma vida sempre negativa, com sentimentos de autodestruição e podendo cair em profunda depressão".
 
A mudança, para esses casos, “deve vir de dentro para fora”. 
A pessoa deve olhar para si mesma na procura de entender o que lhe causa um estado permanente de insatisfação e, a partir daí, pedir ajuda que, em muitos casos, será de um psicoterapeuta que a ajudará a conhecer-se e a compreender-se melhor para encarar a vida com mais alegria e bem-estar.
 
Ao sinalizarmos o que nos causa essa insatisfação, aprendemos a ultrapassá-la e a encontrar alternativas, o essencial é que não se considere normal viver neste estado de insatisfação permanente. Temos de encontrar o equilíbrio entre o que realmente nos faz falta e aquilo que julgamos que poderia preencher-nos essa carência e que nunca resulta em satisfação.




O ser humano é um bicho insustentável. Estamos sempre atrás de uma realização para satisfazer nosso estado de espírito, nosso ego insuperável. O problema é que nunca estamos plenamente realizados, me parece que sempre falta algo para preencher o vazio que insiste em permear nossa alma. Dostoiévski enfatizou que há no homem um vazio de tamanho infinito.

Quando alcançamos um objetivo, uma felicidade, um prazer, logo a maldita consciência te lembra:
 “Acabou! Foi-se o momento, o instante, o lapso de realização. Agora vá atrás da próxima!” 

E eu entendo que isso é uma forma exímia de sobrevivência. 
Este sentimento de falta não nos deixa ficar parados, inertes e inúteis. 
Se por um lado, esta insatisfação plena do humano nos trouxe onde estamos hoje — com tecnologia, ciência, diminuição do sofrimento físico —, por outro, nos trouxe a fome eterna de auto realização.

Todos já passaram por um momento de esplêndido prazer, que logo em seguida se transforma naquele sentimento de vazio, de nada, e se pergunta: 
“e agora?” 

Por isso Epicuro (341–271 a. C.) enfatizava que a busca por prazer desenfreada nos torna hedonistas inúteis, simplesmente porque fazer apenas o que o seu corpo clama, o levará à degradação do ser, a uma tristeza inimaginável, não há outro caminho. Se tornará um animal como outro qualquer, respeitando apenas o instinto selvagem, mas é pior, porque a tua consciência te pune.

Existe alguma maneira de parar com esta insatisfação perene? 
Bem, eu tenho asco a qualquer fórmula que busque idealizar o comportamento humano, que é algo tão subjetivo e relativo de pessoa para pessoa. 
Por isso sempre lembro: não acredite em gurus, ou seja, não acredite em gente que diz ter uma chave única para o sucesso ou para a felicidade. Se esta chave existe, é você que deve moldá-la, e é óbvio que a chave servirá apenas para você.

É um saco nunca relaxar. 
Correr constantemente atrás de realizações a todo momento, como um cão que corre atrás do próprio rabo, mas nunca o alcança. 

Por experiência: a vida me pareceu melhor quando aceitei o fracasso do ser humano, no sentido que nunca seremos plenos em todas as nuances da vida, sempre faltará algo, mas e daí? 
O mundo não é um parque de diversões, e se fosse, também ficaríamos injuriados, porque nós somos humanos. 

Guilherme Angra





No filme “Vicky, Cristina, Barcelona”, de Woody Allen, a personagem Maria Elena acusa Cristina de sofrer de “eterna insatisfação”. O argumento se devia ao fato de que Maria Elena dava tudo para Cristina e, mesmo assim, Cristina continuava se sentindo incompleta, vindo depois a abandonar tudo. Essa passagem do filme é uma mostra do que acontece com muitos ao longo da vida. 
A questão é: Se obtive aquilo que tanto desejei, por que estou infeliz?

Essa queixa aparece muito na clínica: 
  1. “Meu companheiro é perfeito, por que não quero ficar com ele?”; 
  2. “Minha casa é linda e tem tudo o que quero, por que me sinto tão vazio nela?”; 
  3. “Consegui tudo o que quis na minha vida, por que estou infeliz?”. Ou então, 
  4. “Consegui realizar o meu sonho, não sei mais o que fazer daqui para frente”.

Há, na nossa sociedade certa mistura do “ter” com o “ser”. 
O “ter” (reflexo do consumismo), induz a ideia de que o alcance de determinado sonho, habilidade ou objecto de desejo, resultará numa alegria arrebatadora, dando a tão esperada sensação de completude. Neste raciocínio, muitos percorrem os caminhos que tenham mais chances garantidas de “sucesso” (para alimentar o “ter”), sem terem feito uma escolha real. O final dessa estrada é uma incógnita e, ao se ver dentro dela, o sujeito percebe que está num local estranho, não desejado e que o seguiu por motivos alheios à sua realização pessoal.

Esse comportamento tem explicação: 
Desde a infância há o condicionamento social de viver no presente a constante preparação para o que se quer no futuro, através de escolas, cursos e graduações. 
Com isso, é depositado no futuro a esperança de que ao se ter a realização de um objectivo, haverá felicidade. 
Como se ambas fossem as mesmas ou estivessem intimamente conectadas. 
O curso de línguas, por exemplo, traz junto consigo alguns desejos implícitos do estudante: 
Um emprego melhor, viagens internacionais, novas amizades e etc. 
Todos esses desejos trazem imagens de possibilidades felizes. 

A verdade é, que nem sempre estes desejos serão realizados, e quando o são, serão muito diferentes da idealização imaginada. O foco no “ter” sobrepuja o “ser”, fazendo com que esse “ser” fique de lado, adormecido, esperando o “ter” chegar para se manifestar. E isso só pode resultar em decepções.

O que fazer?

Se conhecer é o primeiro passo. 
Não se conhecer a si mesmo (ou não ter investido no “ser”), afecta directamente o modo com que fazemos escolhas, nos desenvolvemos, vivemos e sentimos a vida. 
A análise ou psicoterapia é uma importante ferramenta de auxílio para acessar esse “eu interior” como um espelho, que traz aos olhos do analisado um conhecimento mais real de seu próprio ser. 
Quem se conhece, sabe quem é no mundo e como esse mundo o afecta, podendo fazer escolhas mais saudáveis, ficando mais próximo da felicidade tão almejada.

O que Maria Elena não entendia era que seu relacionamento com Cristina era uma das experiências de sua vida (ser), e não uma forma de alcançar felicidade e sentido da mesma (ter para ser). A escolha de Cristina em sair da relação parecia muito óbvia, na relação tinha-se "tudo", menos felicidade. Sendo assim, Cristina sentiu-se livre para abandoná-la.

Karen Dias Jones







O filósofo Mário Sérgio Cortella, em seu livro Não Nascemos Prontos , ensina que o homem insatisfeito é o que tem o poder de provocar mudanças ao seu redor. 

A satisfação conclui, encerra, termina; 
a satisfação não deixa margem para a continuidade, para o prosseguimento, para a persistência, para o desdobramento, diz ele. 
Ele alega que não tem afeição pelos satisfeitos, pois a satisfação acalma, limita, amortece, e ele prefere os que estão em movimento, os insatisfeitos.
 
Felizmente a insatisfação é uma condição humana, pertence à categoria dos instintos de sobrevivência, e responde pela evolução. O satisfeito estanca, o insatisfeito galopa. 

Cortella cita Guimarães Rosa, que dizia que o animal satisfeito dorme, e por isso é morto pelo predador. A insatisfação do leão, por comida, espaço, fêmeas, lhe proporcionou a condição de rei da savana. Ele sempre quer mais. E é sua ânsia de querer que gera movimento no seu grupo e estimula tanto o seu poder de caça quanto a atenção dos gnus e das zebras. 
Estamos, simplesmente, a falar da evolução das espécies.
 
Entre os humanos, a insatisfação também provoca evolução. 
O satisfeito pára, o insatisfeito continua. 
  1. Quem está satisfeito com seu desempenho no trabalho não trata de melhorá-lo. 
  2. O homem que se sente satisfeito com sua relação amorosa interrompe o galanteio, a conquista, e dá início ao fim. 
  3. Quanto à mulher, a melhor é a insatisfeita, que deseja mais de seu companheiro, por isso o estimula e cresce com ele. 

A plenitude gástrica das relações provoca sono, o desejo de querer mais desperta.
 
Meu professor, ao comparar as pessoas que querem pouco àquelas que querem tudo, queria mostrar ao então jovem cheio de dúvidas e angústias que ser ambicioso, desejar da vida tudo o que ela pode oferecer, estar inconformado com o que se é e o que se tem é absolutamente salutar, especialmente na juventude. Errado seria nada querer, ou pouco desejar.
 
Portanto, a insatisfação é boa, o problema é a ansiedade que ela gera. 

É dela que nos queixamos e desejamos nos livrar. 
Mas, em nossa cabeça confusa, misturamos as coisas e achamos que a satisfação originada por uma diminuição nas expectativas diminuirá a ansiedade. 
Pode ser, mas, com o tempo, poderá gerar frustração, o que, convenhamos, é muito pior.

Eugenio Mussak



É comum idealizar que determinada conquista trará a felicidade. 
Ter o emprego dos sonhos, o carro do ano, mudar de cidade ou ser correspondido no amor aparecem muitas vezes como ideais para alcançar a tão almejada satisfação na vida. 
Mas, depois que os objetivos se concretizam, o prazer da realização nem sempre dura e a insatisfação volta a atormentar.

Se por um lado estar insatisfeito leva o indivíduo a se aprimorar e buscar outros caminhos, por outro é capaz de promover um descontentamento permanente.
Se nunca paramos para saborear o prazer de algumas coisas conquistadas, a satisfação incontida nos faz sofrer.

Muitas vezes algo que se quer tanto perde a graça logo depois que se obtém.
Isso acontece porque frequentemente as pessoas associam erroneamente a conquista da felicidade plena a determinados objetivos.
A satisfação e a felicidade estão intrinsecamente ligadas às histórias de vida de cada um e vão além do contexto económico.

Apesar de estarem próximas, insatisfação e infelicidade não são sinónimas. 
Você pode ser uma pessoa insatisfeita no bom sentido [de querer mudar uma situação] e ser feliz, desde que você não precise trocar de carro todo ano para ser feliz.

É importante ter consciência da realidade para alcançar a serenidade mesmo em momentos de insatisfação.



Yannik D'Elboux



Caso queiramos viver com uma sensação de maior satisfação, devemos sentir Gratidão.

Se olharmos para o que temos e demonstrarmos gratidão pelas coisas boas e menos boas, seremos muito mais felizes e teremos mais sobriedade, para, inclusive, perseguir algo maior e melhor.

Ser grato, não significa ser conformado. 
Podes ir atrás de coisas maiores e melhores, mas não te deves esquecer do que conquistaste até ao ponto em que estás.  


Temos uma capacidade imaginativa muito forte e isso nos leva à idealizações que nos afastam da realidade, o que pode afetar nossa relação com o trabalho, com outras pessoas e até com nossa própria identidade. Por conta disso, não é surpreendente nossa tendência de estarmos sempre insatisfeitos, um sentimento que, se não trabalhado corretamente, pode nos levar à muita frustração.

Welson Barbato


O problema é quando não se alegram com suas conquistas e preferem focar no que não têm.
A insatisfação crônica, um estado de descontentamento e desânimo permanente que as impede de desfrutar o momento presente e aproveitar o lado bom da vida. É claro que em algumas ocasiões é natural sentir insatisfação e desapontamento. Esse sentimento é, inclusive, importante porque é o que nos leva a querer mudar o nosso entorno para progredir e viver melhor.

A insatisfação é o primeiro passo para o progresso humano. 
Oscar Wilde

No entanto, quando o descontentamento é permanente, devemos ligar o sinal de alerta porque pode ser um caso de insatisfação crônica.
Segundo os psicólogos, este tipo de insatisfação baseia-se em uma profunda insegurança e na ideia equivocada que devemos ser perfeitos. No fundo, quem sofre de insatisfação crônica busca a aprovação dos demais. É uma pessoa que costuma minimizar suas conquistas para justificar seu desgosto.

Os principais sintomas da insatisfação crônica são:

  • Queixa constante: reclama muito e de tudo. Nunca está satisfeita. Mesmo quando alcança um objetivo, não se contenta. Se, por exemplo, perde 4 quilos em um mês fica triste porque deveria ter perdido 6. Se faz uma prova e tira 9, fica triste porque deveria ter tirado 10.
  • Busca da perfeição: sempre quer alcançar a perfeição, até mesmo em tarefas simples como, por exemplo, a organização de um armário. Com isso, faz e refaz uma mesma atividade mil vezes, perdendo muito tempo. Frequentemente, se sente frustrada/o com o resultado obtido. Além disso, evita provar algo novo por medo de errar.
  • É bastante crítica/o com as outras pessoas: é muito exigente e crítica com quem a cerca e tem uma enorme dificuldade em aceitar a maneira de agir das pessoas que fazem parte do seu círculo social. Com isso, os outros acabam se afastando, cansados de conviver com alguém tão insatisfeito.
  • Estabelece metas irreais: tem muita dificuldade em traçar objetivos realistas por não saber avaliar com clareza os recursos que dispõe para alcançá-los. Logo, muitas vezes desiste no meio das metas.
  • Não tolera o fracasso: não entende que fracassar faz parte da vida e pode ser uma ferramenta importante para o progresso. Quando algo dá errado, se culpa, faz drama e demora muito para se recuperar.
Além disso, pessoas com insatisfação crônica podem sofrer de ansiedade e são mais propensas à depressão.

Como tratar a insatisfação crônica
O primeiro passo para tratar a insatisfação crônica é admitir o problema e querer de fato mudar o comportamento. Também é recomendável:

  • Estabelecer metas coerentes com sua trajetória e valores pessoais, evitando fazer comparações com a vida alheia.
  • Criar o hábito de agradecer:  todos os dias antes de dormir, anote 3 coisas que realmente deixam você grata/o. Ao fazer isso, pouco a pouco você passará a reconhecer e a valorizar o que tem de bom.
  • Olhar para trás: procure lembrar de onde você veio, tudo o que já fez para chegar até aqui. Este exercício pode fazer com que veja o longo caminho percorrido. Muitas vezes, o mais importante não é o que conquistou, mas o esforço feito, os aprendizados adquiridos e a pessoa que se tornou ao longo dos anos. Certamente você tem uma trajetória bonita e deveria sentir orgulho dela.
  • Focar no essencial: deixe de querer sempre mais. Aprenda a detectar o que é superficial para então descartá-lo. Descubra o que te faz realmente feliz e concentre-se nisso.
  • Buscar apoio psicológico: o psicólogo saberá detectar os motivos da sua insatisfação crônica e ajudará você a mudar a forma como se enxerga. Assim será mais fácil estabelecer objetivos realistas e ser uma pessoa mais relaxada e feliz


in, Mundo dos Psicólogos