Tag: acceptance
Tag: acceptance
8 pages tagged acceptance.
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Chapter 26: Emotional Resilience and Acceptance — Stoicism 101
How Stoics build resilience: not by killing emotion, but by combining the dichotomy of control, apatheia, sympatheia, and amor fati into a posture that bends without breaking.
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Chapter 33: Amor Fati — Stoicism 101
Beyond accepting your fate — actively loving it. The Stoic practice of treating every event, wanted or not, as exactly the right material for your life.
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The First Night: Deny Trauma — The Courage To Be Disliked
Adler’s radical claim — that past experiences do not determine the present, because all behavior is purposive rather than caused — and what this means for the possibility of change.
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The Second Night: All Problems Are Interpersonal — The Courage To Be Disliked
Why Adler claims that every psychological problem — self-esteem, inferiority, anger, fear — is at root a problem of how we relate to other people, and what this means for change.
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The Third Night: Discard Other People’s Tasks — The Courage To Be Disliked
Adler’s most practical tool: separating your tasks from other people’s tasks, and why the desire for recognition is the primary source of unfreedom.
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The Fourth Night: Where the Centre of the World Is — The Courage To Be Disliked
Adler’s positive vision: community feeling as the goal of all interpersonal relationships, why praise creates vertical relationships that enslave, and why contribution — not recognition — is the only reliable source of feeling your life has value.
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The Fifth Night: To Live in Earnest in the Here and Now — The Courage To Be Disliked
Adler’s answer to the question of happiness: self-acceptance over self-affirmation, unconditional confidence in others, contribution as the act that generates worth, and the courage to live fully in the present moment rather than as a journey toward a destination.
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The Courage To Be Disliked — Book Summary — The Courage To Be Disliked
Chapter-by-chapter synthesis of The Courage To Be Disliked by Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga — a Socratic dialogue that introduces Alfred Adler’s radical psychology of freedom, self-acceptance, and interpersonal courage.
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