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there is indeed a creative aspect. You need to know a lot of stuff.. and it might come naturally.
The more you trainethe more easy it seems to develop and project transformative experiences.
I think you would probably write a better diary than myself regarding how people attach and dettach of narratives, how they create some, how they read (semi-accept) some, how they rreject most and how personality and the internal and external bahvioural world develops.
Transformative experiences, awakenings (also named revelations) and strong cognitive dissonances are the main ingredient of personal psychology (or anthropology at the individual level).
As you indicate both creation and attachment are strongly related... a very impressive mythology if it spreads must create one of the above-mentioned three. Agreed
A pleasure I therefore claim to show, not how men think in myths, but how myths operate in men's minds without their being aware of the fact. Levi-Strauss, Claude
The point at which 'willpower' (whatever that is - but I suspect it is a Learned Behaviour Disorder) is exercised, is preceded by a chaotic personal history. 'Willpower' has to be seen in that context. It is not something plucked out of thin air or applied by a secret switch.
One can change one's life, but only if that life is ready to be changed - like the psychologists lightbulb. You can't be me, I'm taken
I think some people refer to willpower when they talk about the human ability to realize that something was different that he expected and act accordingly.
Maybe others have different definitions of willpower.
But willpower in the sense you use it is a very particular word used in some particular context in western treatments of the self (which we all know is our main characteristic, to develop hundred of concepts and ideas about the self).
Changing ones life includes changing the narrativ or even the myth - but I do agree, you have to be ready. For most people it is a dissatisfaction with their current lifes that makes them look for change. But it is not solely a thing of willpower or thinking - that does not work, it has to go deeper into what kcurie calles the symbolic.
That is a story you tell yourself. :-) En un viejo país ineficiente, algo así como España entre dos guerras civiles, poseer una casa y poca hacienda y memoria ninguna. -- Gil de Biedma
For most people it is a dissatisfaction with their current lifes that makes them look for change. But it is not solely a thing of willpower or thinking - that does not work, it has to go deeper into what kcurie calles the symbolic.
The mystics can be a guide here, but only if one is at the proper point in their life. When I was in grad school I took a Western Intellectual History course taught by, my luck, a self professed Thomist, his belief system was far from the only thing this professor liked to be outrageous about. One of the assignments was Juan de la Cruz's Dark Night of the Soul! I was a 21 year old atheist and thought that having to read and attempt to understand this drivel work was my own dark night of the soul. I read the work and tried to understand it but I had no basis for so doing. I got my A by not having to deal with Juan. A few years later, after some relevant personal experience, no problem! I clearly understood what Juan had been talking about, even though the way out that I found would have been alien to him. (Unless, perhaps, some of Juan's experiences were triggered by ergot, but even then...)
One thing though is clear: utter and abject misery is a wonderful motivator to cause one to consider that perhaps there are errors or omissions in one's understanding of one's self and the world, although it is far from sufficient. Subsequently I have often seen that a similar situation is the motivating force for others to reevaluate themselves and their lives. One can arrive at a similar conclusion on a purely abstract and intellectual basis, but the understanding thus achieved usually lacks the emotional force and motivating power to cause them to be willing to undertake the difficult inner work needed for change.
"It is not necessary to have hope in order to persevere."
On a completely related note, I hope to get some face time with Guru Fran in Paris.
you are the media you consume.
One thing though is clear: utter and abject misery is a wonderful motivator to cause one to consider that perhaps there are errors or omissions in one's understanding of one's self and the world, although it is far from sufficient.
This also works for countries.
And perhaps for civilisations (but not quite so much.)
But none of us choose or control our own history
We certainly do not choose the circumstances into which we are born. Worse, the development of our brains is guided for years by our parents, who are, after all, only doing the best they can. But at a certain point we can become aware of these factors and then we have the ability to choose how we react and respond to that situation. Therein lies our own opportunity and responsibility. "It is not necessary to have hope in order to persevere."
But I strongly agree that a mythology that is strongly integrative of all aspects of our psyches, that enables us to see and understand the constraints under which we labor and to visualize how our world could better be organized and that enables people to feel that they are doing vital and necessary work to provide a better future that might include ponies for all could become viral and overwhelm weaker frames. Christianity did this some 1700 years ago, but, IMO, did so by winning the promising and lying contest with other religions. How about a mythology wherein it is not necessary to die to reach heaven? "It is not necessary to have hope in order to persevere."
How about a mythology wherein it is not necessary to die to reach heaven?
now you're talking!
'heaven is in your mind' (winwood/capaldi) 'The history of public debt is full of irony. It rarely follows our ideas of order and justice.' Thomas Piketty
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