I have to disagree abit. The post can also be seen as setting a base line for being enough. Savoring, being grateful about the little things and putting your perspective about “enough” are healthy self-care practices.
Why? Because in general we have 2 very harmful features of our brain:
It gets used to stuff really quickly.
Our strongest intuitions (predictions) are often wrong.
Any change no matter the degree over time will quickly diminish in value so there is a constant desire for more. This is called Hedonic Adaptation. The second point is that we tend to catastrophize and overestimate the value of needing. Like we need to pass this test or need this particular type of job to be happy.
If you’re interested there’s a course on Coursera call the Science of Well Being by Yale University. It’s free to audit.
TLDR: Setting base lines of being enough or having enough can increase our enjoyment of what we do have and reduce catastrophizing and Hedonic Adaptation.
quantumkatz t1_jcd1mqd wrote
Reply to comment by Malamazu in [IMAGE] Be grateful to how far you've become now by InsideDark_2260
I have to disagree abit. The post can also be seen as setting a base line for being enough. Savoring, being grateful about the little things and putting your perspective about “enough” are healthy self-care practices.
Why? Because in general we have 2 very harmful features of our brain:
Any change no matter the degree over time will quickly diminish in value so there is a constant desire for more. This is called Hedonic Adaptation. The second point is that we tend to catastrophize and overestimate the value of needing. Like we need to pass this test or need this particular type of job to be happy.
If you’re interested there’s a course on Coursera call the Science of Well Being by Yale University. It’s free to audit.
TLDR: Setting base lines of being enough or having enough can increase our enjoyment of what we do have and reduce catastrophizing and Hedonic Adaptation.