Credit to Gurwinder Bhogal and Naval Ravikant

  • Triumph@fedia.io
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    17 hours ago

    This is easy (read: privileged) advice to follow if you’re entirely self-sufficient. Most people aren’t. Most people need things from other people, which means that they have to tailor their words and actions accordingly, so that they’re not cut off from resources.

    • krooklochurm@lemmy.ca
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      2 hours ago

      This, and also you can always be a better, more likable version of yourself. There’s a difference between understanding the things people expect from other people and tailoring your actions and thoughts to align with those things, and sacricifing who you are to be taken advantage of, or contorting yourself into something unrecognizable.

      It’s a fine line that many people who are not neurotypical or struggle with some kind of trauma have trouble finding, but it is real and learning to see it can bring positive and lasting change to your life.

      Also, nobody likes someone that eats poop so if you eat your own poop or other peoples poop the stop eating poop.

    • snek_boi@lemmy.ml
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      16 hours ago

      I love your comment because this is literally what happens with democratization efforts in societies where there are very strict gender roles or religious duties. It is very easy to preach about democracy and freedom, but it is harder to truly expand people’s capabilities. If someone is to truly be themselves, they need a context that truly empowers them to be free.

      Here’s an example I witnessed: I once saw a man lose his house, his job, and his inheritance, because he came out to his conservative family. He went from a comfortable middle class upbringing to being homeless in a matter of minutes. A friend took him in while he found a job, but it was only a matter of time (and money) for him to flee to a more inclusive society.

      In the face of this, perhaps it would be easy to just say “well, at least he found out who truly loved him for who he was”, but we shouldn’t romanticize homelessness, poverty, and severed connections. They’re devastating.

      So what can we do? At a shelter I worked in, we made darn sure people had a clear path forward before fully leaving their abuse-filled reality. More broadly, we should strive to expand human capabilities.

      Talking is easy. Being capable is harder.

      • blarghly@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        You arent the first to note the relation between a good democracy and self sufficiency. In Jefferson’s ideal America, everyone would be a self-sufficient subsistance farmer, thus allowing each to freely speak his mind.

        • snek_boi@lemmy.ml
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          16 hours ago

          Ineed, not my original thinking. I base my thinking on Amartya Sen’s view of human development, Christian Welzel’s view of the human empowerment process, and what I’ve seen in the places I’ve worked at.

    • Frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      17 hours ago

      I was able to follow it, but it meant finding a completely different community from the one I was in. That’s not an easy thing to do.

      The rewards are 100% worth it, though.

    • sad_detective_man@sopuli.xyz
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      17 hours ago

      I’m glad people are starting to grow up from this tired old sentiment. We live in a vast network of people and literally no one is entirely self sufficient. the ones who seem to be are just striking a pose and selling a vibe as a means of connecting. we do live our lives with consideration of others or else we find ourselves pretty alone when it all comes down.

  • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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    16 hours ago

    Counterpoint: no person exists in a vacuum. Behaviors are an aspect of social interaction, and most are learned through observation (that is, your behavior is mostly the product of interacting with and in some ways mimicking or mirroring other people).

    Your “self” adjusts to fit the social environment of the moment - this is socialization. For instance, you probably behave differently if you are alone with your parents, with your parents and your spouse, with your parents and your sibling(s), alone with your sibling(s), alone with your spouse, with your children and your spouse, or with the whole family, and probably all of those interactions are very different from those with your classmates or coworkers.

    Changing behaviors with social context doesn’t mean you are not being “your true self”, it’s just life.

    I would also argue that there is no privacy and no private life without some aspects of the self remaining hidden at times.

    Life is complicated, and you shouldn’t worry too much about being “real”, you should just enjoy the company of the people you are with in the time that you are with them. It goes by faster than you realize.

  • edgemaster72@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Unfortunately being me means basically no socialization so that’s not a great way to find people who like me, either.

  • RagnarokOnline@programming.dev
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    17 hours ago

    For me this is less about “being yourself” and more about not overly bending on your values to please others.

    We are communal beings, and sometimes that means you have to act in certain ways to get along with the group. However, you should not have to compromise on the things that are most important to you in order to get along with the group. If you do constantly compromise, you’ll probably be liked, but you may never find YOUR group and always feel a bit like an outsider.

    (If your friends like to say “that’s fire” And “yeet” and you don’t, that probably shouldn’t be a dealbreaker. If your friend group always expects you to drink when you’re hanging out and you don’t like to drink, then it’s probably a sign the fit isn’t perfect. Try not drinking around them and see if they accept you or else if they push you out and create room for you to find a different group. It’s scary to do, but results in deeper relationships in the long run.)

    • Hegar@fedia.io
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      17 hours ago

      Yeah I don’t think “being yourself” is a thing that anyone has to worry about. You can only ever be yourself.

      As you point out, we’re social mammals. We always exist in a social context and the behaviors that benefit us are highly dependent on that context.

      It’s also perfectly natural for our identities to change over time. We don’t “discover the real me” we adopt new identities that benefit us more. That’s just how being a human is.

      • RagnarokOnline@programming.dev
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        11 hours ago

        I was at a Meyers-Briggs workshop one time (company-mandated) and the facilitator said something that made a lot of sense to me: “At any given time, your personality is about 33% who you want to be, about 33% who the people around you want you to be, and about 33% who you really are”.

        I think we adapt based on our context.

        • Hegar@fedia.io
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          11 hours ago

          Meyers-Briggs workshop

          I don’t put much stock in business astrology grifters myself 😆. But I definitely agree that we adapt our behaviors to the people we’re with and situations we’re in. And that how we want to be seen by others and the expectations of others both have a strong impact on the behavior we exhibit. I would strongly disagree with that last third though - we are always who we really are.

          The behaviors we’re reluctant or incapable of changing around others are no more us than the behaviours that we have stronger insight into and control over.

  • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    18 hours ago

    Almost sounds like it belongs on a Hallmark card, but I can dig it. It’s like that bumper sticker “your vibe attracts your tribe.” It’s cliche but some cliches are popular because there’s some truth there.

    I’ve found that, to most of my peers, I’m definitely the weird one. I often let others pick the music because, while most of my coworkers tend to play stuff I find agreeable, the stuff I listen to is too eccentric, weird, and downright alien to them. So we listen to hip-hop, country, R&B, or pop music at work. And I listen to Japanese rock in my car on the way home. So is the real me an eccentric, or someone who’s accommodating of others? I don’t think there’s an easy answer. At least not one that fits on a greeting card.

    • Susaga@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      A man speaks to his wife as a husband, his child as a father, his employee as a boss and a drinking buddy as a friend. None of these are the entirety of the man, nor are they false personas. They are many sides of the same man.

      Are you eccentric or accommodating? From the sounds of it, I think you’re both.

    • tomkatt@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I listen to Japanese rock in my car on the way home. So is the real me an eccentric, or someone who’s accommodating of others?

      No clue, but Tricot and Man With A Misson are perfectly good rock out tunes.

  • Diddlydee@feddit.uk
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    18 hours ago

    Being Yourself is such an impossible to quantify term. Your self is comprised of many disparate things that help to format who you are, and much of that will be beliefs or actions or styles or whatever that are influenced by others. You taking them on, consciously or not, doesn’t mean the changed you isn’t the real you. I don’t think many people actually try to be someone else, but rather they copy or take on traits for any number of reasons.

    • Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works
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      17 hours ago

      I do think it comes down to not intentionally trying to be someone else, I have seen many people do that in an attempt to be more popular or w/e (particularly back in high school) sometimes it genuine and other times I’m like… Why?

  • teft@piefed.social
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    17 hours ago

    Yes and no.

    You should try and be your authentic self but if you don’t like something about your personality you can pretend to be a version of yourself without that trait and eventually you’ll just be that new person. Fake it 'til you make it. It’s how I became a decent public speaker. I just pretended to be other good speakers I knew and eventually it was second nature to speak normally without the nervousness in front of a crowd.

  • logicbomb@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    The real me is so introverted that I don’t find people at all. Well, I find them, I guess, but I mostly want them to leave me alone.

    I guess zero human interaction is a tiny bit too low, so my dream is to live in a big city where everybody ignores me.

  • the_q@lemmy.zip
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    17 hours ago

    This requires knowing who you are and I really don’t believe anyone does.

    Psych 101 student: “I know who I am!”

    • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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      16 hours ago

      “Who you are” changes with context. For instance, you behave differently with your spouse than you do with your parents. There are things you would do and say with your spouse that you would not with your parents. Similarly if you are with a 4-year-old vs. with a coworker.

      Behaving differently around different people doesn’t mean you’re being “fake”, it’s just an aspect of human social life.

        • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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          16 hours ago

          When you say “struggling” with masking, do you mean struggling with trying to wear the right mask, or with feeling like you’re always wearing a mask?

            • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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              12 hours ago

              My experience is that this struggle is mostly the result of anxiety over being disliked, and that anxiety can be reduced or removed by mental re-framing of the situation causing the anxiety. Re-framing is what I’m trying to express in my comment above.

              Rather than getting stuck in the anxiety spiral over needing to wear the right mask, recognize that this entire concept is increasing the social separation between yourself and the other people, that the sensation of wearing a mask comes mostly from unfamiliarity with social behaviors (I don’t know how to behave in this situation, so I have to try to fake it). The solution is not to wear a better mask, or to wear the mask better, but to recognize that the feeling of masking is being created by anxiety over not knowing what to do.

              I’m not trying to say that it’s easy, to say “just get over it”. I’m saying that you can change your perspective on (and emotional reactions to) social interactions by changing the way you think about them, and with practice, and with exposure, and teach yourself over time that the anxiety is unwarranted.