The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life
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He never tried to be anything other than what he was.
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Self-improvement and success often occur together. But that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re the same thing.
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After all, no truly happy person feels the need to stand in front of a mirror and recite that she’s happy. She just is.
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dedicate your life to chasing a mirage of happiness and satisfaction.
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The key to a good life is not giving a fuck about more; it’s giving a fuck about less, giving a fuck about only what is true and immediate and important.
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Our society today, through the wonders of consumer culture and hey-look-my-life-is-cooler-than-yours social media, has bred a whole generation of people who believe that having these negative experiences—anxiety, fear, guilt, etc.—is totally not okay.
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We joke online about “first-world problems,” but we really have become victims of our own success.
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the idea that the more you pursue feeling better all the time, the less satisfied you become, as pursuing something only reinforces the fact that you lack it in the first place.
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“You will never be happy if you continue to search for what happiness consists of. You will never live if you are looking for the meaning of life.”
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And if you go around giving a fuck about everything and everyone without conscious thought or choice—well, then you’re going to get fucked.
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Because when you give too many fucks—when you give a fuck about everyone and everything—you will feel that you’re perpetually entitled to be comfortable and happy at all times, that everything is supposed to be just exactly the fucking way you want it to be. This is a sickness.
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You will see every adversity as an injustice, every challenge as a failure, every inconvenience as a personal slight, every disagreement as a betrayal.
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I once heard an artist say that when a person has no problems, the mind automatically finds a way to invent some. I think what most people—especially educated, pampered middle-class white people—consider “life problems” are really just side effects of not having anything more important to worry about.
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finding something important and meaningful in your life is perhaps the most productive use of your time and energy. Because
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it’s okay for things to suck sometimes.
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We start to feel as though something is inherently wrong with us, which drives us to all sorts of overcompensation,
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that life itself is a form of suffering. The rich suffer because of their riches. The poor suffer because of their poverty. People without a family suffer because they have no family. People with a family suffer because
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Happiness is not a solvable equation.
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We have evolved to always live with a certain degree of dissatisfaction and insecurity, because it’s the mildly dissatisfied and insecure creature that’s going to do the most work to innovate and survive. We are wired to become dissatisfied with whatever we have and satisfied by only what we do not have.
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our own pain and misery aren’t a bug of human evolution; they’re a feature.
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You may salivate at the thought of a problem-free life full of everlasting happiness and eternal compassion, but back here on earth the problems never cease. Seriously, problems don’t end.
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“The solution to one problem is merely the creation of the next one.”
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“Don’t hope for a life without problems,” the panda said. “There’s no such thing. Instead, hope for a life full of good problems.”
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Happiness comes from solving problems. The keyword here is “solving.” If you’re avoiding your problems or feel like you don’t have any problems, then you’re going to make yourself miserable.
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The secret sauce is in the solving of the problems, not in not having problems in the first place.
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To be happy we need something to solve.
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Emotions evolved for one specific purpose: to help us live and reproduce a little bit better. That’s it. They’re feedback mechanisms telling us that something is either likely right or likely wrong for us—nothing more, nothing less.
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the sadness of being alone teaches you not to do the things that made you feel so alone again.
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In other words, negative emotions are a call to action.
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When you feel them, it’s because you’re supposed to do something. Positive emotions, on the other hand, are rewards for taking the proper action. When you feel them, life seems simple and there is nothing else to do but enjoy it.
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Emotions are merely signposts, suggestions that our neurobiology gives us, not commandments.
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A fixation on happiness inevitably amounts to a never-ending pursuit of “something else”—a new house, a new relationship, another child, another pay raise.
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And despite all of our sweat and strain, we end up feeling eerily similar to how we started: inadequate.
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“What pain do you want in your life? What are you willing to struggle for?” Because that seems to be a greater determinant of how our lives turn out.
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Because happiness requires struggle. It grows from problems. Joy doesn’t just sprout out of the ground like daisies and rainbows. Real, serious, lifelong fulfillment and meaning have to be earned
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What is the pain that you want to sustain?
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I didn’t like to climb much.
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I just liked to imagine the summit.
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I wanted the reward and not the struggle. I wanted the result and not the process. I was in love with not the fight but only the victory. And life doesn’t work that way.
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Who you are is defined by what you’re willing to struggle for.
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our struggles determine our successes. Our problems birth our happiness, along with slightly better, slightly upgraded problems.
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the joy is in the climb itself.
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true and accurate measurement of one’s self-worth is how people feel about the negative aspects of themselves.
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To become truly great at something, you have to dedicate shit-tons of time and energy to it. And because we all have limited time and energy, few of us ever become truly exceptional at more than one thing, if anything at all.
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any single person will be an extraordinary performer in all areas of life, or even in many areas of their life.
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believe that exceptionalism is the new normal. And because we’re all quite average most of the time, the deluge of exceptional information drives us to feel pretty damn insecure and desperate, because clearly we are somehow not good enough.
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mass-media-driven exceptionalism.
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The Internet has not just open-sourced information; it has also open-sourced insecurity, self-doubt, and shame.
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People who become great at something become great because they understand that they’re not already great—they are mediocre, they are average—and that they could be so much better.
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Pleasure is the most superficial form of life satisfaction and therefore the easiest to obtain and the easiest to lose.
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