ENSPIRING.ai: Antifragility - How to use suffering to get stronger - Jonathan Haidt & more
The video discusses human resilience and antifragility, exploring how challenges and suffering can lead to growth and development. It delves into the idea that systems, individuals, and even societies can become stronger when faced with adversity, emphasizing that this principle extends to many facets of life, including personal growth and societal structures.
The concept of happiness is critically examined, challenging the viewpoints that advocate for relentless positivity. It argues that the emphasis on constantly pursuing happiness can paradoxically lead to greater dissatisfaction. The speakers suggest embracing negative experiences and viewing them as growth opportunities, rather than resisting reality.
Main takeaways from the video:
Please remember to turn on the CC button to view the subtitles.
Key Vocabularies and Common Phrases:
1. antifragility [æntiˈfrædʒɪlɪti] - (noun) - The characteristic of becoming stronger when exposed to stress and adversity. - Synonyms: (robustness, toughness, resilience)
The psychological principle of antifragility.
2. earmark [ˈɪrmɑrk] - (noun) - A characteristic or identifying feature. - Synonyms: (attribute, hallmark, feature)
But the truth is, suffering, even collective suffering that we're going through, is often the earmark that some real change is happening.
3. resilience [rɪˈzɪliəns] - (noun) - The capacity to recover quickly from difficulties. - Synonyms: (endurance, toughness, flexibility)
resilience is absolutely critical to accomplishing their mission.
4. tranquility [træŋˈkwɪlɪti] - (noun) - The quality or state of being calm and peaceful. - Synonyms: (serenity, peace, calmness)
The old idea of happiness that the stoics sort of enjoyed was that happiness was a sort of tranquility.
5. sterile [ˈstɛraɪl] - (adjective) - Free from bacteria or other living microorganisms; totally clean. - Synonyms: (sanitized, antiseptic, germ-free)
If you protect kids from bacteria, if you keep them in a sterile environment, you're damaging their immune system.
6. discourse [ˈdɪskɔrs] - (noun) - Written or spoken communication or debate. - Synonyms: (discussion, conversation, dialogue)
Now, just to be clear, I am not anti-happiness, but what I am concerned about in the current discourse is...
7. paradoxically [ˌpærəˈdɒksɪkli] - (adverb) - In a seemingly absurd or self-contradictory way. - Synonyms: (ironically, contradictorily, incongruously)
What it is actually, paradoxically, doing is setting people up for greater levels of unhappiness.
8. agility [əˈʤɪlɪti] - (noun) - Ability to move quickly and easily. - Synonyms: (nimbleness, dexterity, swiftness)
One of the things that I talk about in my book, emotional agility, is the idea that expectations are disappointments waiting to happen.
9. obsession [əbˈsɛʃən] - (noun) - An idea or thought that continually preoccupies or intrudes on a person's mind. - Synonyms: (fixation, compulsion, preoccupation)
The opposite of all of this thinking is the American obsession, forgive me, with positive thinking and optimism...
10. narrative [ˈnærətɪv] - (noun) - A spoken or written account of connected events; a story. - Synonyms: (story, account, tale)
And this is the narrative that we build, really.
Antifragility - How to use suffering to get stronger - Jonathan Haidt & more
We'd all like to increase pleasure and minimize pain. But the truth is, suffering, even collective suffering that we're going through, is often the earmark that some real change is happening. There's stuff that life throws back at you that you can't control. resilience is absolutely critical to accomplishing their mission. I had a choice in whether to give up. I had a choice in whether to fight for a second chance. Difficult experiences are part of life. They're part of our contract with the world. Simply by virtue of being here. What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. That gets at the idea. The psychological principle of antifragility. It's a wonderful term. That's actually a clunky, ugly term, but it was made up by Nassim Taleb because we don't have a word for this in the English language, which is that there are some systems that get stronger if they get pushed around, knocked around.
So a wine glass is fragile. If you knock it over, it breaks. Nothing good happens. A plastic cup is resilient. If a kid throws it off the table, it doesn't break, but nothing good happens. But there's some things that have to get thrown off the table. There's some systems that have to get pushed around. Things like the banking system had to be tested, or it gets fragile and collapses. Bones have to be tested, used, or they get weak. If you were to fly to Mars, your bones would get weak. The immune system, if you protect kids from bacteria, if you keep them in a sterile environment, you're damaging their immune system. The immune system has to face challenges in order to learn.
Life's beauty is inseparable from its fragility. You are healthy until you are not. You are with the people that you love until you are not. You have a job that you love until, for some reason, that job no longer works out. It is really important that as human beings, we develop our capacity to deal with our thoughts and emotions in a way that isn't a struggle, in a way that embraces them and is with them and is able to learn from them. The old idea of happiness that the stoics sort of enjoyed was that happiness was a sort of tranquility. So this is really all about a recipe for avoiding unnecessary disturbance and anxiety. So you don't try and control things that you can't now, the only things you can control are your thoughts and your actions, and that is it. That's it. And if you accept the idea that everything outside of your thoughts and actions are fine, they're fine.
As they are, and you let that idea really sort of drip into your soul, then you have a very good template for avoiding unnecessary disturbance and anxiety. The opposite of all of this thinking is the American obsession, forgive me, with positive thinking and optimism that you can, by believing in yourself and setting your goals, crank the world up into line with your aims. And the reality is, we just can't. I do have concerns about the overarching societal messaging that we are hearing, which is that we should focus on being happier, that we should choose to be happy, and that we should think positive.
Now, just to be clear, I am not anti happiness, but what I am concerned about in the current discourse is that I think what it is actually, paradoxically, doing is setting people up for greater levels of unhappiness. Let me explain why. First, what we know is that when people focus time and time again on being happier, when they set it as a goal, when they value that idea of being happy, there's a body of research that shows that those individuals, over time, become less happy. Now, why is this? One of the things that I talk about in my book, emotional agility, is the idea that expectations are disappointments waiting to happen.
When we overvalue the idea of being happy as a goal, we essentially set ourselves up to perceive every slight, every disappointment as a marker of, and proof of the fact that we aren't achieving that goal effectively. So, in a very strange way, valuing happiness is not ultimately the way to achieve happiness. You know, I flew in this morning from LA, and we're here in New York, and something that I'll repeat in my head over and over is resist nothing, which seems so silly, but to me, it's a real key to happiness, is trying to.
Again, Richard Rohrer says, love is learning to say yes to what is. And that is one of the most fundamental principles of this sort of thought prism is learning to say yes to what is. As Eckhart Tolle says, it's madness to resist what's happening. It is madness, obviously, if you can change something, if something is unpleasant or physically painful, and you can pivot. Yeah, resisted, resist. Like, I'm all for that. But if your flight is delayed, you can watch people start suffering. So there's an unpleasant thing happening. A flight has been delayed, but the suffering happens when you start.
And you can watch this happen from what other people and myself call the witness place. You watch yourself constructing a story, and this is where suffering comes. It's your attachment to how you think things should be. And of course, I still do. This please don't think I'm sitting in a chair. I'm not floating. But you see the story begin to happen and you go, Delta or United should do better. They're always doing this. That's like the first level. And then you start going like, I'm going to miss this thing, or I'm going to be late to the dinner.
And dammit, my ticket costs this much. And this is the narrative that we build, really. Something has happened. The flight is delayed. Maybe it was completely preventable, but it's happening. You need to find a quiet place inside where just the fundamental fact that you are participating in reality is enough value and dignity to draw upon at any moment. You only change through suffering. Otherwise, why would you change? Why would you change? It's working.
The things I learned about resilience through my time in prison is that human beings, I believe by nature, are very resilient. And oftentimes we don't recognize our own resiliency until we're faced with obstacles and circumstances that challenge us and pushes us. And it looks different for everybody. You know, when I think about my journey in prison, I went through some very advanced experiences. I had some significant obstacles to overcome, including, you know, long term solitary confinement, which they estimate is designed to drive a person crazy after 90 days.
And what I found in that environment is that people figure out ways to cope and to survive when they're forced to do so. And for me, I found that I was very resourceful when my back was against the wall. If you acknowledge what you're going through and you recognize that it is an obstacle, that it's that dark moment, but you also realize there's light on the other side of that tunnel, then you can get through. And to me, I think hope is probably the cornerstone of resilience.
As long as you have hope, you can come out on the other side of anything. Once you dim the light of hope, there's no possibility of you coming out on the other side. And to me, I think that's what resiliency is. I always looked at. If I focus on the purpose instead of the pain, then I can get through to the other side. And that's how I live my life. And to me, you know, those things embody what resilience really is.
I would think three things. Three of the ingredients toward being resilient is you have to be optimistic. Optimism is such an integral part of getting through adversity. I would say a second thing is really being resourceful and figuring out in your environment, what are things you can utilize to help you cope with whatever it is you're going through. And then I think the third thing would be you have to have memory loss.
That probably sounds crazy, right? But what I found is that a lot of times we replay memories that no longer exist over and over in our head. And what that does is it holds you hostage. And so once you begin to release those memories and recognize that you can never reclaim that space or that time or that experience, then you can move forward in life, you know, because now you've taken the shackles off your feet and you're a lot more mobile. And I think in order to be resilient, you have to not be thinking about what happened in the past, and you really just have to be focused on what you need to do to move forward.
The first step of honing and strengthening our resilience muscles is to take the first step into the fear, into the unknown, into the uncertainty that all of us, including the leader, have within themselves. It doesn't have to be a big step. You're not, you know, you're not leaving a building in a tall bound. You don't have a superhuman cape or a wand or Gandalf's magic from Lord of the Rings. You do have the ability to step one small step into that.
And the wonderful thing about charting the stories over time of leaders is you learn to that each of these people get more resilient and a little bit quicker about stepping into the fear and a little more brave about stepping into the fear with each step that they take. And so it's accretive. It's about the mileage of moving into our fear just with a tiny step, tightening our core, squaring our shoulders, moving into it, and then getting more access to our inner strength, getting more access to our resilience.
So resilience is absolutely critical, and yet I am absolutely certain that it doesn't come from on high. We can't download it on our iPhones, but we can discover it within ourselves and develop it within ourselves and find it stronger and easier to get each time as we move forward.
Resilience, Philosophy, Motivation, Inspiration, Mental Health, Coping Strategies, Big Think
Comments ()