Nvm, this was the actual definition, my bad. Stimming at wikipedia
I guess I had read it, but didn’t remember it, so it felt like an original thought.
Leaving this here, but might as well delete if that is preferred.
Nvm, this was the actual definition, my bad. Stimming at wikipedia
I guess I had read it, but didn’t remember it, so it felt like an original thought.
Leaving this here, but might as well delete if that is preferred.
On GrapheneOS:
What 10 executive orders did he withdraw after issuing this one?
I admit, my reply does not truly fit here but I think this is the best place (in the current state of this topic) to make a point I think is important and difficult to navigate
I do think individuals state of mind, intentions and actions are the way to bring about change but I also think it’s important to not fall into consumerism-patterns.
Like how recycling or buying an electric car is pushed as a solution for climate change when what’s needed is global cooperation and policy change wrt resource management.
The positive individual actions we can take do make our own lives and the lives of the people around us better and we get a stronger, more resilient local community.
By building that strong community we do get a platform to launch ourselves towards the greater society we live in to demand change either by reform or revolution (depending in what’s possible and/or most adequate).
See for example this Community building post in the Betterment and praxis community.
I’ve been thinking a lot about dignity lately. I don’t think I can define dignity well at all but I’m still pretty sure it has something to do with world peace[1] and a bright future for humankind.
As for how to do it, I don’t know, sry.
[1] where peace is not the same as the absence of military conflict but more like peaceful coexistence and cooperation.
Hello,
Since I decided to get involved in your life I would like to ask how you’re doing and if there is anything related to this topic you’d like to continue talking about (either here or in private - I assume there are some kind of PMs on beehaw).
So, here we go…
My short list of things that seem to have turned things around for me:
And by “turned things around” I mean that I’ve managed to raise the floor of my personal hole enough so that my every day life actually kind of works. My economy is not wrecked. I have friends that call/text me to socialise and not only to keep tabs on me or check that I’m still around. I’m making plans for the future-future (so like 1-3 years not only for today or this week), stuff like that.
I’m not “cured”, I still get depressed for months some times, but it’s months and not years. And I let myself be depressed, for whatever reason there is this time, rather than bash myself for being depressed.
Sorry, this turned out more bloggy and preachy than intended. I hope you find something useful anyway :)
Since you have a good sense of “not this” I’m inclined to throw some shit at you and maybe something might stick and work out well to function as a a rebar net to get that concrete floor started so you don’t have to start all the way down every fucking time.
Before I do though I wonder if you’d like to get a small list of stuffs to check out? <– this is the actual question!
Well, I’d say that “not this” is quite useful and also hopeful.
From personal experience I think the biggest holes I’ve climbed out of didn’t even give that much direction. Knowing and/or wanting anything (even if it’s “not this”) is a decent start.
If you keep trying to find ways to express yourself I think that you can slowly start to raise the floor of whatever hole you’re in.
Thanks, this looks promising, I’ll investigate.
But also thanks for giving me the word “delayed” to use in my searches. Sometimes it’s hard to remember good synonyms.
Thanks, but not really as the “time capsule” feature would be lost since the email would be sitting in my future-/scheduled-folder.
But in the end that might be what I end up doing if I can’t find a suitable service.
I’m still quite bad at saying no and exiting situations, but I have become much better than before.
Some things I have done and try to remember to do:
I’m really not qualified in any way to state the below, just trying to draw from my personal experience and express what I think is useful and relevant in this situation.
English is not my first language
Honestly I think it is more useful and helpful to focus on the second part of the equation: exiting the situation.
Exiting situations is a tremendously useful life skill regardless of the other person(s) intentions while spotting people with bad intentions could become a burden as it might lead you down a path of mistrusting many more persons than you “need” to mistrust.
Learning to say “no” in different and effective ways is also a way to learn to say yes and will, in my experience, let you live a life closer to what you want.
I suspect that I’m still early on my path to communicate this effectively because I was not really listened to as a child, so my feelings and wishes where not seen as relevant to a situation.
As for how to do it: I don’t really have anything groundbreaking to give you. But as with most things I suspect it’s just practice: start saying no! And start acknowledging how you feel or felt even if it’s too late to do anything about it as that can teach yourself to look for clues (inside yourself) in the future (maybe).
Ok, thanks I will have to dive into Emacs then and give it a try.
For app supported habit forming there are some gamification apps that some friends swear by but they’ve never really done it for me
These kind of apps come close to a subset of my needs, but their focus on tracking every thing and the long lists of everything just work against me.
As I wrote in another comment, the problem isn’t keeping track when things go well, the problem is getting to a state where things go well.
Oh, I know, procrastination is my drug of choice…
Fortunately I have a job that requires presence and readiness to act but very little actual work so I can indulge in this kind of thinking and these projects here :)
While I’m not primarily looking for a discussion about strategy I do understand it’s inevitable, so…
While this seems like a great strategy for you, it isn’t for me, I’ve tried this and many other strategies and failed at all.
I’m looking for this specific capabilty in the format because what I need is a low-stakes way to get back on the horse. And from my research and knowledge about myself this requirement (“forget if not done”) is the best I can work with. If you have ideas or systems that deal with this I’m open to discuss them
I don’t really need help when things are going well, but I will fail and I will drop all the balls and almost everything else for a few months for reasons, some days I will forget if I took my 08:00 medication or if I have eaten. Some weeks I wont be able to call my mother to check on her or my friends to make plans.
I need a place to see 3-5 meaningful things I can do right now, because if there are too many I get overwhelmed. If there is a long list of things I haven’t done I get too discouraged or if I have to start by figuring out what to do I get stuck on finding the best thing.
So, while I’m glad you can manage to just fucking do it, I can’t.
Well, I’m sure these grey haired people would be more than happy to hike with you and introduce you (more or less subtly) to the people they have in their life of your approximate age and gender-preference.
As they are older (and not just more stressed) they are still used to help people meet “organically”.