To be a loving person is to wrestle with a profoundly improbable idea: that however modest our position in society might be, however much we may have been maltreated in the past, however mesmerised we are by the deplorable behaviour of powerful individuals, however shy and frail we are, we are constantly capable of causing other people significant hurt.
Alain de Botton in A More Loving World: How to increase compassion, kindness and joy
Alain de Botton FRSL (/dəˈbɒtən/; born 20 December 1969) is a Swiss-born British author and public speaker. His books discuss various contemporary subjects and themes, emphasizing philosophy's relevance to everyday life. He published Essays in Love (1993), which went on to sell two million copies. Other bestsellers include How Proust Can Change Your Life (1997), Status Anxiety (2004), and The Architecture of Happiness (2006).
He co-founded The School of Life in 2008 and Living Architecture in 2009.[1][2] In 2015, he was awarded "The Fellowship of Schopenhauer", an annual writers' award from the Melbourne Writers Festival, for that work. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alain_de_Botton
Sometimes deep, often amusing, therapeutic chats touching on philosophy, spirituality, religion, consciousness, culture, music, dating, and life. Join Sam, Joe and Ali as they discuss the 10,000 illusions that make up “reality”.
Musical theme by Ehsan Gelsi - Ephemera (Live at Melbourne Town Hall)
Joe: "To be a loving person is to wrestle
with a profoundly improbable idea: that
however modest our position in society
might be, however much we may have been
maltreated in the past, however mesmerised
we are by the deplorable behavior of
powerful individuals, however shy and
frail we are, we are constantly capable
of causing other people significant hurt."
That's a Alain de Boton.
And that really struck me
because I think I'd always
given myself an out.
That.
It didn't really matter what I did.
That I was a small and
insignificant person.
And as it says, 'however, mesmerized
we are by the deplorable behavior of
powerful individuals', it always seemed
enough to just look at someone like a
Donald Trump, and just be like, 'well,
I'm nowhere near that bad, and I'm also
nowhere near that powerful, so the
things that I do don't really matter.'
But as it says, ' We are
constantly capable of causing
other people significant hurt.'
I'll look back and see
a lot of burnt bridges
.
And actually burning bridges is.
The only way I know to deal
with a lot of this stuff.
And I like to think that I have gotten
better in sobriety and recovery.
But I've always had an edge
that's capable of hurting people.
And I guess the point of this note and
why it's, why I wrote it down at the time
and why it struck me so much was this
is the justification that I'd used for
my poor behavior in hurting people, that
I was just a little insignificant ant.
And reflecting on it now it's
partially that insignificance that
led to some of the rage that led
to some of the bitterness, that
led to some of the poor behavior.
So, I guess the thing that I'm trying
to find now, is some genuine humility.
And just getting myself out of the
way and seeing other people, and
other people have their struggles.
And to quote Bob Dylan's grandma,
that "everyone walks a hard road."
And I know I'm not
going to get this right.
It's not going to be perfect.
But this quote reminds me that
I matter to maybe a handful of people,
but to those people I really matter.
And I have to be really careful to try
to be kind wherever I possibly can.
And it doesn't matter
what's happened to me.
It doesn't matter whether
I've been given a diagnosis or
I feel like I...
I've had a hard time in life.
It actually only matters
how I act in the world.
That's what I'll be judged on.
And that's what I should be judged on.
I need to get my thoughts right.
And my emotions, right.
And then hopefully my
actions will improve.