Before getting to the main
content of this blog---as you know I've had many problems with my list
messages. Although I just got everyone to switch to a google group
list, it turns out that one isn't working for everybody, in fact, I
don't even get my own messages anymore. My friend Rob Brezsny has
recommended EZezine. It takes just 30 seconds to sign up for my new
list called "Zap Zine" Go here:
"Every man supposes himself not to be fully understood or appreciated." — Ralph Waldo Emerson
"What poison is to food,self-pity is to life." — Oliver C. Wilson
"Self-pity is a death that has no resurrection, a sinkhole from which
no rescuing hand can drag you because you have chosen to sink." —
Elizabeth Elliot
"A man's as miserable as he thinks he is." — Marcus Annaeus Seneca,ca. 54 BC– ca. 39 AD, a Roman rhetorician and writer
"Do not weep; do not wax indignant. Understand." — Baruch Spinoza
"To understand the world one must not be worrying about one's self." — Albert Einstein
"Sometimes I go about in pity for myself, and all the while a great wind is bearing me across the sky." — Ojibwa Saying
Self-pity is one of the cheapest, most addictive and debilitating drugs
available in the neuropharmacopeia of negative emotions. You don't even
have to walk down to the corner store; you can start free-basing
self-pity while you are still under the covers. self portrait with glazed donuts
Self-pity
is like a self-replenishing box of glazed donuts that is always placed
conveniently by your side. When you drive, it's on the seat right next
to you; when you go to bed, it jumps into bed with you. Without even
realizing it you find your hand reaching under the cardboard and
cellophane lid of your donut box, and before you know it there is a
heavy mass of glazed donut paste decomposing in your stomach. The
essential problem with glazed donuts is that we eat them to feel
better, but they actually make us feel worse. Self-pity is one of the
most potent of the deadly comforts, the things that we reach for when
we feel bad that seduce us into feeling much worse.
We
become vulnerable to self-pity when our pride is wounded, when our
inner child is upset, when we focus on our neediness rather than
compassion for others. If we are focused on serving the world, we find
ourselves in a golden age of opportunities. If we are focused on how
the world serves us, however, then we see the world as mother's breast
and find ourselves in a an age of sorrows, frustrations and irritations
as we discover a vast, diabolical conspiracy to keep us from suckling.
Self-pity is like an obese man eating pizza in front of the TV being
irritated by the irrelevant sight of a starving child in Ethiopia while
the world ignores the staggering injustice that slender, young hotties
don't love him for who he really is.
"A tear dries quickly when it is shed for troubles of others." — Marcus T. Cicero, ca. 106-43 BC, Roman orator and politician
Two essential attributes self-pity requires are internal considering
and upward comparison. When in self-pity mode, our focus is on internal
consideration — what we are feeling, how we are put upon, victimized
and unfairly treated by life. While we are focused on internal
consideration we tend to be blind, deaf, dumb and indifferent to what
others are feeling.
"Never allow your own sorrow to absorb you, but seek out another to console, and you will find consolation." — J. C. Macaulay
Self-pity is prone to upward comparison; it would like us to compare
ourselves to others who seem better off. Self-pity is violently
allergic to downward comparison, to the comparison of our situation to
that of others who are worse off. The image of the starving child in
Ethiopia is a pity-party pooper, as unwelcome as the parental knock on
the door in the midst of masturbation. So if you find yourself in
self-pity mode and want to intervene, external considering and downward
comparison will be like a bucket of water on the head of the Wicked
Witch of the West.
On the other hand, we should not have
contempt for ourselves or others who are afflicted with self-pity.
Also,I have found that it is sometimes very hard to discern where
authentic suffering leaves off and self-pity begins. It is crucial to
have compassion for yourself when you must endure galling hardships and
mistreatment from others. There are many gray cases where
self-compassion for authentic suffering starts to phase into self-pity.
In other cases you know self-pity is present, but there are also
elements of self-compassion and authentic suffering as well. I have
found two elements that seem to aid in discerning self-compassion from
self-pity. When in self-pity mode we will tend to want others to come
to the rescue, show that they feel our pain, and make us feel better.
We are in a state where we feel dependent on outside rescue. The other
sign that we are not in self-compassion, and have descended into
debilitating self-pity, is when we become passive, lethargic and
unwilling to take available positive steps that could improve the
situation. If you have genuine compassion for someone who is suffering,
you will be willing to take positive steps to help. If you have genuine
compassion for yourself, you will be willing to take positive steps for
yourself, and won't wait for outside help when there are things you can
do for yourself. For example, it always improves my morale if my home
is reasonably clean and in order. If I'm feeling bad, unless there's
some overwhelming trauma or grief, I am still able to clean up my home.
If I'm willing to take at least that simple step to help myself then I
am probably in self-compassion mode. If I'm not willing to take this
positive step, then I am probably in self-pity mode and don't want
anything that will interfere with binging on negative emotions.
So here's my intervention plan for self-pity: Shift from internal
considering to external considering, shift from upward comparison to
downward comparison and make a list of all the things you do have
to feel grateful for. Take positive actions to help your life. Do not
wait for outside rescue. If you care about yourself and your suffering,
then get up and take positive actions for yourself. Clean your house,
pay down your credit card by two dollars if that's all you can spare,
do a neglected task, do any small services for yourself that you would
do for another person you cared about who was suffering. Many others
have recognized positive action as the antidote for self-pity:
"The
secret of being miserable is to have leisure to bother about whether
you are happy or not. The cure for it is occupation." — George Bernard
Shaw
"The cure for grief is motion." — Elbert Hubbard
"When you find yourself overpowered, as it were, by melancholy, the best way is to go out and do something." — John Keble
"I
got the blues thinking about the future, so I left off and made some
marmalade. It's amazing how it cheers one up to shred oranges or scrub
the floor." — D.H. Lawrence
Ok, I think you get the message
about action as an antidote. I've got a few more suggestions before I
close by recommending a brand of magic that can transform self-pity.
The opposite of self-pity mode is Warrior mode. I strongly recommend
reading some of the documents in the Warrior Stance section of this site. You could start with The Way of the Warrior.
To learn more about how afflictive thoughts and feelings work
psychologically and neurologically, and for some practical techniques
to deal with them see: A Guide to the Perplexed Interdimensional Traveler. Many useful ideas and techniques can be found in Awakening from Depression
Finally, self-pity is based on negative interpretations. Another
antidote is to practice what I call "interpretive magic." For those who
have time to read more, here is a very brief lesson on interpretive
magic:
It is a common and limiting assumption that only one
interpretation of an event or situation is correct. But the phenomenal
world is rarely, if ever, so cut and dried. Interpretation may often be
more usefully regarded as a choice rather than flattened into what is
believed to be the single correct answer. For example, I recently had
to send in my laptop, my only computer, for repairs. Due to some
improbable mishaps it had to be sent in two more times and the problem
that should have taken days to fix has taken weeks. An extremely
reasonable and plausible interpretation is that I have been
meaninglessly inconvenienced due to mechanical forces beyond my
control. An alternate interpretation is that the improbable mishaps
were "meant to happen," and that I needed space to open up from a long
period of laborious editing I was doing. Which of these interpretations
is most likely? The first explanation would seem to pass that classic
test of logic, Occam's Razor, that would have us prefer the simplest,
least fancy explanation that accounts for all the facts. By contrast
the "meant to happen" point of view is often used in ways that seem
glib and reeking with sentimental rationalization. Mysterious forces,
or the principle of synchronicity, would have to be employed to justify
this interpretation, and that means that this hypothesis is
significantly fancier than the first. But in some cases of
interpretation, likelihood and strict rules of logic are not the most
useful aspects when choosing amongst possible interpretations.
In
the case of the improbably prolonged laptop repair, I recognized both
interpretations as potentially valid. Instead of deciding which of
these interpretations was "right," I recognized that it was much more
useful for me to choose the interpretation that I intuitively
preferred. When I tried on the first interpretation — the mechanical
forces beyond my control interpretation — I found that it did nothing
for me except increase stress and a sense of helpless frustration. I
could feel my blood pressure rising and my jaw clenching and realized
that this interpretation had adverse effects on both my body and
psyche. The second interpretation provided a sense of space opening up,
a sense of serendipity and unexpected possibilities. By choosing the
second interpretation, I entered a different timeline than I would have
entered if I had chosen the first interpretation. I decided to read a
couple of books on a certain subject that I probably wouldn't have had
time to read if I had access to my laptop. These two books were
accompanied by some parallel realizations of my own, and this led to a
huge, life-changing breakthrough in an area of my life that I had
struggled with for decades. In this case, choosing the interpretation
that felt more empowering and life-affirming seemed to lead to a much
more positive outcome.
The act of consciously choosing an
interpretation of an event or situation is an example of what I call
interpretive magic. The creative interpretation of life elements is not
merely a matter of passive perception. Once you realize you have the
right to interpret and reinterpret given elements you usually need to
act on the new interpretation to establish the timeline it opens up.
For example, the person who created the artifact in the photograph
recognized that they had the choice to merge elements of the Rastifari
religion and Star Wars. Recognizing that they had such a choice led to
the creative actions of impaling a Star Wars Imperial Walker on rebar
and painting it in Rastifari colors. The opposite of interpretative
magic is fundamentalism or orthodoxy of any kind where one's right to
interpret or reinterpret might be regarded as sacrilege or heresy. I
have found that many people who are not overt fundamentalists fall for
a similar delusion that I call the "museum curator fallacy." Such
people view everything, especially things found in nature, as sacred
and never to be touched or interfered with. Such museum curator types
often have a hands-off attitude toward people, especially if they are
from an exotic culture, as if they were members of a Star Trek away
team with an overly orthodox interpretation of the Prime Directive.
Intruding their will on anything seems to them like a sacrilege and an
interference with a divine plan. They don't seem to recognize that they
were incarnated as human beings, the most interventionist organisms
that we know of, an attribute that is as much a part of nature as
everything else.
Arnold Toynbee, the great historian who
studied the lifecycle of civilizations, concluded that a civilization
was in decline when it no longer had a ruling mythology. Your personal
mythology is the aggregation of your significant choices of
interpretation. Keep your interpretive choices creative and life
affirming so that you have a healthy personal mythology. If you don't
have a positive ruling mythology then your life will be in decline.
Consider
the occurrence of this card a propitious time to boldly and creatively
apply interpretative magic to some area or areas of your life.