Mole
Permabanned
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 20,282
I have only stolen one book in my life so it is significant. It was The Divided Self.
And the book spoke to me. This is surprising because the book is about schizophrenia, while I don't suffer from schizophrenia. But still, I do have a divided self.
And interestingly, as I worked on the Japanese Desk for the Australian Government, I discovered the Japanese were also divided between tatemae: the face we show the world, and honne: how we really feel.
So I am closer to the Japanese rather than schizophrenics, but each of us shares a divided self.
So I am divided between my social self and my inner self. And no matter what the situation, and no matter what the temptation, I always cling to my inner self.
My ambition is to marry my inner self with my social self. Occasionally I manage to do that and the result is ecstatic.
I am surprised that it seems to me that most other people are not consciously conscious of their inner self, not seeking to preserve it in the face of all the rewards for a successful social self. I am possibly wrong in this perception but it seems to me they have committed suicide of their psyche under social pressure. But they don't seem to suffer psychologically for this so perhaps I am wrong. Or perhaps not, as next to Iceland, Australia has the highest consumption of anti-depressant prescriptions in the world.
Is this because we fail to acknowledge our divided selves, and so fail to bring the two together. And as a result we fall into depression and are prescribed anti-depressants.
Is perhaps the cure for some depression the rediscovery of our psychological integrity?
I don't suffer from schizophrenia or depression and perhaps this is because I constantly struggle against social pressure to abandon my inner self.
So perhaps some depression is a result of an abandoned inner self. Abandoned children can fall into depression, so perhaps our depressed inner self is like an abandoned child.
And the book spoke to me. This is surprising because the book is about schizophrenia, while I don't suffer from schizophrenia. But still, I do have a divided self.
And interestingly, as I worked on the Japanese Desk for the Australian Government, I discovered the Japanese were also divided between tatemae: the face we show the world, and honne: how we really feel.
So I am closer to the Japanese rather than schizophrenics, but each of us shares a divided self.
So I am divided between my social self and my inner self. And no matter what the situation, and no matter what the temptation, I always cling to my inner self.
My ambition is to marry my inner self with my social self. Occasionally I manage to do that and the result is ecstatic.
I am surprised that it seems to me that most other people are not consciously conscious of their inner self, not seeking to preserve it in the face of all the rewards for a successful social self. I am possibly wrong in this perception but it seems to me they have committed suicide of their psyche under social pressure. But they don't seem to suffer psychologically for this so perhaps I am wrong. Or perhaps not, as next to Iceland, Australia has the highest consumption of anti-depressant prescriptions in the world.
Is this because we fail to acknowledge our divided selves, and so fail to bring the two together. And as a result we fall into depression and are prescribed anti-depressants.
Is perhaps the cure for some depression the rediscovery of our psychological integrity?
I don't suffer from schizophrenia or depression and perhaps this is because I constantly struggle against social pressure to abandon my inner self.
So perhaps some depression is a result of an abandoned inner self. Abandoned children can fall into depression, so perhaps our depressed inner self is like an abandoned child.