Long-term view
Aug. 5th, 2003 10:00 amThe answer, of course, is (and if you're reading down the page in reverse order I recommend skipping down one entry) that finding a happy medium is a bitch.
The simple solution is to take a long-term utilitarian view. Don't be reliable because you want to be nice, but because you want to be viewed as reliable. Keeping your word is a good thing because it means that you're trusted. If you want people to compromise with you, then you have to learn how to compromise.
Learning not to do the thing you want to do right now so that you can do the thing you want to do in the future is a vital part of growing up. Most people are terrible at it. I'm not great at it (I usualyl know what the right thing is, but think I can compromise myself more than I actually can).
And there are always situations where you cannot win - places where you can't do what you want to do and have people like you for it. In which case you have to make up your own mind, take responsibility and live with the shit that it stirs up. You have to decide whether the friends you lose are really the people you want around you, and whether the thing you want is really worth all the fuss.
It's bloody hard being an adult, making your own decisions, living with the results and not blaming other people for how your choices turn out.
I think it's worth it.
The simple solution is to take a long-term utilitarian view. Don't be reliable because you want to be nice, but because you want to be viewed as reliable. Keeping your word is a good thing because it means that you're trusted. If you want people to compromise with you, then you have to learn how to compromise.
Learning not to do the thing you want to do right now so that you can do the thing you want to do in the future is a vital part of growing up. Most people are terrible at it. I'm not great at it (I usualyl know what the right thing is, but think I can compromise myself more than I actually can).
And there are always situations where you cannot win - places where you can't do what you want to do and have people like you for it. In which case you have to make up your own mind, take responsibility and live with the shit that it stirs up. You have to decide whether the friends you lose are really the people you want around you, and whether the thing you want is really worth all the fuss.
It's bloody hard being an adult, making your own decisions, living with the results and not blaming other people for how your choices turn out.
I think it's worth it.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-05 03:40 am (UTC)Because I think that the reason the world isn't more the way it should be, is that people don't act the way they should. And if I try to make my actions closer to the way I would like to be treated myself, I feel I am bringing the world one little tiny mini-step closer to The Way It Should Be.
I don't like it when people are assholes to me. I try not to be an asshole to them.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-05 03:44 am (UTC)"Respect others and treat them as humans" would be better, if less catchy.
"Don't be an asshole." is even better though :->
no subject
Date: 2003-08-05 08:55 am (UTC)But overall, I'm more concerned with treating other people like people than I worry about delayed gratification. You can delay things TOO long as well, making yourself every more miserable waiting for the time when everything is magically 'right'. But there are rarely reasons for treating other people like crap.
no subject
Date: 2003-08-05 07:06 pm (UTC)