my secret button (button #1)

by Pace on January 27th, 2006 @ 4:17 pm in Usual Error Project

Ever since highschool, I’ve realized two interesting things about myself, each of which I call my “secret button”. One of them is the fact that people, even complete strangers, feel that they can trust me, and tend to open up to me and tell me intimate details of their lives. Calling this a “button” is really silly, since I don’t push it consciously and I can’t ever stop pushing it. But it’s been happening ever since I started Triumvirate BBS and I’d chat with people who called up. This is a good thing and it makes me very happy. The only tricky consequence is the Katamari Effect; I care about people, I become attached to them, then I feel obligated to help, and then I feel bitter about feeling obligated. This cycle often results in a sinusoidal curve oscillating between me being very social/outgoing and very hermity. Lately I’ve been getting better at breaking this cycle, and I’ve done it by breaking the “caring implies obligation” link.

I’m trying to eliminate the words “should” and “ought”, and some uses of “need” from my vocabulary. I find them to be never helpful and often harmful.

Instead of saying “Oh, I can’t play games, I should do this thing on my to-do list instead,” I’ll think about how much I want to play games and how good it would feel to get that thing done, and I’ll do whichever I want to do more.

Instead of saying “I need to go to work today,” I’ll think about how much I want to go to work, and how much I enjoy the fruits of my labour, like money and benefits and doing things that are often fun.

Instead of saying “I ought to call my friend back,” and then either doing it out of responsibility or feeling guilty because I didn’t, instead I’ll think about whether I want to call my friend back, and if I want to, then I will, and if I don’t want to, then I won’t.

“But,” you say, “how can you live like that? Choosing not to feel responsibility, obligation, or guilt is tantamount to opting out of society completely! How can you ever have any friends if they can never rely on you for anything? How can you have a committed relationship, or — zounds! — a marriage?! Or a child?!”

Commitment and responsibility are just wants like any other. They’re just more abstract and long-term wants. I want to have a happy, stable marriage. I want to be a good mom. I want to have good friends and healthy relationships with myself and others. All I need to do is keep these wants in mind (and in heart) while i’m also feeling other, more concrete, more short-term wants. Then I just do whichever I want to do more.

Some of my friends might be uncomfortable with this. You might say “Oh, so you’re saying that you’re unwilling to engage in the basic terms and conditions of friendship. Why should I even bother with you if I can’t depend on you for anything, since you’ll always just do what you want to do?”

I’m still trying to figure out how to reply to that. I guess all I can say is “I care about you and I want to be friends with you,” and try to work out exactly what that means if needed.

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2 Comments!

#1 Posted by Pace and Kyeli » the nature of altruism on September 9th, 2008 4:21 pm | link

[...] You do what you want to do. When you feel conflicting wants, you may be disappointed that you can’t have both. When you attempt to achieve a want and fail, you may be disappointed that you failed. All that makes sense. But what doesn’t make sense is being disappointed about what you want or do not want. There’s this pressure in society that tells you that to be a good person, you must be a selfless and altruistic person. But if you follow it down to the root, everything bottoms out in selfishness. Ultimately, you do what you want to do, and if you want to help someone else, you will. But at the root of it you’re doing it because you want to. Since everything you do is exactly what you want to do, you’re not even capable of making an unselfish act. [...]

#2 Posted by Andy on July 18th, 2009 7:05 am | link

i come up with that problem. i don’t like phone calls, so i don’t make them. i prefer to communicate in other ways. other people think i’m selfish, or that i don’t care, or whatever… because i don’t call when they want to talk to me. my dad has this running joke, where he tells me that “the phone works both ways” meaning i should call him more often… when really, i’m thinking the same thing. if he wants to talk to me, he should call me. i do call him, or e-mail him, or whatever, when i want to talk to him. if he wants more, he can initiate it. (our relationship is less close because like my attitude towards phones, his attitude with communication is rather one-way).

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