This is probably not what you think it's about, but...sometimes we make mistakes, and it's like, yeah, we shouldn't be rewarding the people that make mistakes, right? We call them out for a reason? But like, think about all the times when you made mistakes in your life, what was the thing that you needed most then? Sometimes you need humility, yes, but what about all those times when you needed forgiveness, grace, acceptance even? When was it that you felt most motivated to pick yourself back up, admit that you could do better, and feel good about it? What if becoming a better person didn't involve feeling like shit first? This is a weird and perhaps hidden (insiduous?) problem with our online spaces, it usually doesn't feel like the right move to offer forgiveness, grace, and acceptance because when we're in these spaces everything falls down to the lowest common denominator and if there is something to be taken advantage of, it will. That random stranger on the other side of the interaction has as little accountability toward you as you have patience for them, and so perhaps it just "makes sense" to adopt an antagonistic attitude because that's been proven to at least illicit a response, regardless of if it effects positive change. And it's like...feeling like a piece of shit DOES work, it =does= make you want to change. But not only does it not feel great, it also comes with all of these nasty long-term side effects, ones that I'm sure you've all realized a thing or two about (if not, maybe a therapist can tell you about it). It's sad because some of us don't even need the other person telling us we're shit, we tell it to =ourselves= whenever we make a mistake, and what then? There's no such thing as a safe space to make a mistake anymore, because there's always someone there to judge us for it. And so we just live life in a way such that we just never feel like we're making any mistakes anymore. Maybe we learn to stubbornly ignore everything that goes wrong and assert that we're always right. Maybe we learn to just work three times harder than anyone else, we learn to prepare for every possibility so that nothing will go wrong. Or maybe we just learn to never try anything that we don't already have a guarantee of success at. I want to believe there's a better way, even though I've never really known one. But I think it takes time, and love. A lot of love, from a lot of people. One in particular. Maybe not the one you're thinking of.
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
On feeling like shit
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