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by mindhash
1834 days ago
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My dad lived in a small town in India for most of his life. When I come across stoicism and read about it, I realized he has been living like a stoic his whole life. His way of approaching life is so aligned with the concept. And yet he has never read or heard about Epicteus. I have been reading a lot of books about philosophy lately, but I realise the most you can learn is from people around you. The books are often contradictory. In the exact same situation, a book titled why zebras don't get ulcers, the author claims venting out is much healthier to reduce stress. There was a study done which indicated people who vent out on the spot are less likely to be stressful (less stress harmone). Observing how others deal with situations and picking the best out of them works out well for me. When I come across a friend who managing a heated argument and is calm after ward, I try to learn from him. Understand why he is able to do so. |
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Interesting if that study checked the environment in each case. If you vent out at endless taxi drivers, real estate agents, shop salesmen or something like that, wouldn’t it only make you constantly angry?
Psychologists say that we have to express, not exactly vent out. Expressing emotions is telling others how you feel, so they could adjust their behavior or attitude accordingly. In 90% of cases, words about what you feel are enough.
“It confuses me when you leave papers on my table with no comments”
“I feel angry if my cup is not where I left it”
“I’m sad about you trying to fool me”
Saying that without usual “venting out” expression is more constructive. That’s how you feel. They usually don’t know until you tell them.
The key point is what you feel, not some random noun/adjective (it may be hard to detect and verbalize for first 50 times). Angry mode is a force that you use when people refuse to comply. But often they aren’t even aware of your issue (or unable to help you).
(This comment is very fragmentary and tangential, but I leave it at that.)