"You don't hate yourself, you hate not being yourself."
My response:
It's impossible to not be yourself. You take yourself with you wherever you go.
The person who is 'not being authentic' - they're wearing a mask, basically. But the choice to wear a mask came from that person. The type of mask came from that person. Perhaps the action of choosing a mask IS an authentic part of that person and they would grow from accepting themselves - with the masks and the other ways that they adapt to society in order to survive.
There's nothing inherently wrong, or "fake," about choosing to adapt to survive. The problem comes when people blame society. Actually adaptive masks are a human survival mechanism that we were all born with because we are social creatures. Wolves and birds also know how to fall in line. That is obviously natural.
So maybe we would benefit from not obsessing over what's authentic and what's fake, and instead ask: what does my mask say about me?
Even the most 'authentic person' would not pull their pants down and defecate in the street, unless they were mentally ill. Shame is a built-in mechanism that causes humans and animals to conform for the betterment of society. Elephants depart from the pack when they're sick- because of shame - and this allows the pack to retain its pace and not to catch the illness. Neurotypical humans withhold their carnal urges, like relieving themselves, stealing food from a passerby's plate or saying "hey wanna fuck?" because it's written into our programming to notice social response.
So the responses we have to society are part of our true self. The mask says something about us, too.
This is why I'm not a fan of sentiments like "this isn't the real me" and "you don't know what I'm really like." Actually, I do agree there is more to a person than immediately meets the eye, but whatever you're like right now is part of what you're really like. It may not be all of it, but in describing 'who you are,' everything you do is part of it. Obviously if someone is cognitively compromised, mentally ill, etc - we can evaluate their actions with that in mind. But still... not every person with a particular illness says the exact same things. The underlying themes in your presentation and actions come from you.
My response:
It's impossible to not be yourself. You take yourself with you wherever you go.
The person who is 'not being authentic' - they're wearing a mask, basically. But the choice to wear a mask came from that person. The type of mask came from that person. Perhaps the action of choosing a mask IS an authentic part of that person and they would grow from accepting themselves - with the masks and the other ways that they adapt to society in order to survive.
There's nothing inherently wrong, or "fake," about choosing to adapt to survive. The problem comes when people blame society. Actually adaptive masks are a human survival mechanism that we were all born with because we are social creatures. Wolves and birds also know how to fall in line. That is obviously natural.
So maybe we would benefit from not obsessing over what's authentic and what's fake, and instead ask: what does my mask say about me?
Even the most 'authentic person' would not pull their pants down and defecate in the street, unless they were mentally ill. Shame is a built-in mechanism that causes humans and animals to conform for the betterment of society. Elephants depart from the pack when they're sick- because of shame - and this allows the pack to retain its pace and not to catch the illness. Neurotypical humans withhold their carnal urges, like relieving themselves, stealing food from a passerby's plate or saying "hey wanna fuck?" because it's written into our programming to notice social response.
So the responses we have to society are part of our true self. The mask says something about us, too.
This is why I'm not a fan of sentiments like "this isn't the real me" and "you don't know what I'm really like." Actually, I do agree there is more to a person than immediately meets the eye, but whatever you're like right now is part of what you're really like. It may not be all of it, but in describing 'who you are,' everything you do is part of it. Obviously if someone is cognitively compromised, mentally ill, etc - we can evaluate their actions with that in mind. But still... not every person with a particular illness says the exact same things. The underlying themes in your presentation and actions come from you.
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