pull down to refresh

I just showered. While cleaning the shower, which I hate, because I lose a lot of my hair, which I love, which always clogs the drain almost immediately, so I'm basically always showering with the dread of the shower overflowing ... I started thinking about destiny and whether I believe in it.

I came to the conclusion that I don't believe in destiny, but I believe in the power of destiny.

I believe that believing in it can make one achieve great things. It doesn't matter if destiny actually exists, in the sense that it doesn't matter what you do, because destiny is something that happens to you. (In that sense, I think it would also mean that you don't believe in free will.)

I also believe the same is true for God. I don't believe in God, but I can see the power believing in God gives people. I can tell that my parents would be worse off if they didn't believe in God. I think history also shows that. People can achieve great, but also horrible things, and their belief in some supernatural power on their side is what gives them power.

So essentially, I need to face that, apparently, I believe in the power of humans deluding themselves to achieve great things. I'm not sure if I like to believe that. It can get quite depressing sometimes. So ... can't I just believe something else?


This desire to believe something else is related to what I've read in the book I'm currently reading: How to Win Friends and Influence People. In the first chapters, the author talks about what common strong desires of people are. And one of them is feeling important.

It seems this desire can be so strong that people would rather go insane than face that their lives have no meaning or that horrible things happened to them. And they're actually happier because of it! You're not the person you want to be, but if believing so makes you feel great, why not?

Some authorities declare that people may actually go insane in order to find, in the dreamland of insanity, the feeling of importance that has been denied them in the harsh world of reality. There are more patients suffering from mental diseases in the United States than from all other diseases combined.

What is the cause of insanity?

Nobody can answer such a sweeping question, but we know that certain diseases, such as syphilis, break down and destroy the brain cells and result in insanity. In fact, about one-half of all mental diseases can be attributed to such physical causes as brain lesions, alcohol, toxins and injuries. But the other half—and this is the appalling part of the story—the other half of the people who go insane apparently have nothing organically wrong with their brain cells. In post-mortem examinations, when their brain tissues are studied under the highest-powered microscopes, these tissues are found to be apparently just as healthy as yours and mine.

Why do these people go insane?

I put that question to the head physician of one of our most important psychiatric hospitals. This doctor, who has received the highest honours and the most coveted awards for his knowledge of this subject, told me frankly that he didn't know why people went insane. Nobody knows for sure. But he did say that many people who go insane find in insanity a feeling of importance that they were unable to achieve in the world of reality. Then he told me this story:
I have a patient right now whose marriage proved to be a tragedy. She wanted love, sexual gratification, children and social prestige, but life blasted all her hopes. Her husband didn't love her. He refused even to eat with her and forced her to serve his meals in his room upstairs. She had no children, no social standing. She went insane; and, in her imagination, she divorced her husband and resumed her maiden name. She now believes she has married into English aristocracy, and she insists on being called Lady Smith.

And as for children, she imagines now that she has had a new child every night. Each time I call on her she says: "Doctor, I had a baby last night."

Life once wrecked all her dream ships on the sharp rocks of reality; but in the sunny, fantasy isles of insanity, all her barkentines race into port with canvas billowing and winds winging through the masts.

Tragic? Oh, I don't know. Her physician said to me: "If I could stretch out my hand and restore her sanity, I wouldn't do it. She's much happier as she is."

How to Win Friends and Influence People, p. 22-23

Now I need to go and believe I can be a lightning protocol developer.

some territories are moderated
111 sats \ 4 replies \ @k00b 3h

I wouldn't conflate belief and delusion like this. They are related only in that they are points of view without incontrovertible proof in their favor. Delusion is believing something that is incontrovertibly false.

Belief is an ingredient of delusion like flour is an ingredient of cake. But flour is not cake and cake is not flour.

I'm not delusional for believing I can be an opera singer. If I sing operas, even only in my lonesome, I am an opera singer. To be an opera singer only requires you do certain things. That's not belief or delusion. It is fact.

Maybe I want to be an accomplished opera singer though. Maybe I want to walk into a room and have beautiful women whisper to each other "he's that opera singer." Or maybe I want to get invited to sing at the best operas. Or whatever. If what I want is more than merely being a thing I can readily achieve in isolation, I should probably unpack that.

Believing that I can avoid defining what I want from life in detail and still get what I want from life in detail would be delusional.

https://www.selfauthoring.com/

reply
111 sats \ 3 replies \ @ek OP 2h
I wouldn't conflate belief and delusion like this

Mhh, you are right! I made a big jump from belief to delusion here:

[...] their belief in some supernatural power on their side is what gives them power.

So essentially, I need to face that, apparently, I believe in the power of humans deluding themselves [...]

Here, I framed delusion as simply a stronger belief. As if believing something really hard necessarily makes it a delusion, where it doesn't matter anymore if there's incontrovertible proof against it. So yeah, you're right, it's not fair to frame delusion as just a strong belief. You can believe in something really hard and still not be deluded. Good point!

https://www.selfauthoring.com/

Ohh, I remember @elvismercury posting about this! This is the perfect time to bring it up again. I've been writing for myself in a journal pretty consistently for a while, and I started to wonder about other forms of writing that could help me. Like this!

reply
111 sats \ 2 replies \ @k00b 2h
So yeah, you're right, it's not fair to frame delusion as just a strong belief.

You were directionally making a worthwhile point about the power of belief, but at some point you discarded the mantissa and kept on with the math.

Fear delusion. Let yourself believe.

reply
111 sats \ 1 reply \ @ek OP 2h

Floating-point arithmetic is hard

reply
66 sats \ 0 replies \ @k00b 1h

The higher the power the more significant the mantissa.

reply

I believe you can!

reply
182 sats \ 1 reply \ @ek OP 1h

In the spirit of @k00b's reply, I think the real question is:

Can I be a paid lightning protocol developer?

I have implemented part of the spec, I have contributed to the spec, so in some sense, I'm already a lightning protocol developer.

It's rather about convincing someone to pay me to continue doing what I've already done for free. I have time, so I'm giving it time. I've also only been doing it for free for a couple of weeks so far.

I think it would be a great honor to get paid to work on the lightning protocol. If the money comes through a grant, even though it's called a grant, I wouldn't take it for granted, haha

reply

If I had a trillion sats I would support you!!

reply
0 sats \ 0 replies \ @ek OP 3h

🫶

reply

I have heard it said that "one cannot choose what one believes." But is this really true? It seems neither more or less plausible than a statement like "one cannot choose one's talents". While both are true in some ways---we cannot choose what we are naturally gifted at, nor do we choose the circumstances we grow up in which influences our beliefs---it seems incorrect to suggest that we have no influence on our talents or our beliefs. I think for those who want to believe something, they can find a way to believe it.

reply
55 sats \ 1 reply \ @plebpoet 5h

I think it’s powerful to negotiate with yourself exactly what you believe, to hopefully grow comfortable with it over time and understand how it shapes you

reply
0 sats \ 0 replies \ @ek OP 48m

big agreeing chirp

reply
21 sats \ 0 replies \ @Akg10s3 4h

Giving my opinion on this question...

Why do these people go crazy?

I would say that God has lost or doesn't have a purpose for a person who suddenly goes crazy...

Which becomes a very heavy burden for family and children!!

And I also think that mental illness is worse than any terminal illness like cancer or diabetes because I say this...

Because being crazy, besides affecting you as a person...

It affects and destroys the self-esteem of the people who care for you and who have to go out with you, even if it's just to your monthly appointment with your psychiatrist...

Feeling the weight of people's stares, who might be judging or criticizing you for being with a crazy person, is devastating and unbearable...

Although many deny it, even if it's our father, being with a crazy person always generates discomfort and shame...

reply
What is the cause of insanity?

A brochure that NHS gives to people who suffered the "first episode of phychosis" assumes the reason to be an amount of work/life stress. Each person has a different innate threshold to tolerate stress, and when that limit is exceeded our minds escape into an alternative reality. This state of psychosis is similar to a regular dream: you follow some scenario "on autopilot" without knowing that you are dreaming. Most do eventually wake up from the phychosis, but they may relapse after the next stressful event. Some live there permanently thereafter. That's schizophrenia... Alcohol and drugs play a role by lowering the threshold.

reply