Nakadai on Nostr: Try to take a few steps to un-brainwash yourself. They can't tell us what to think, ...
Try to take a few steps to un-brainwash yourself.
They can't tell us what to think, but they can tell us what to think about. And within that small corridor, they can establish a good vs evil narrative. This warps your world view, no matter what "side" you are on.
In reality, there are no "sides".
So how do you stay sane in an insane world?
- Don't engage when you get emotionally triggered, and don't come to sudden conclusions about "current things" that you are not well versed in. You don't always have to have a strong opinion about stuff.
- Stop consuming content from channels that have a proven track record of psychological nudging such as corporate media, statist communication, and centralised social media.
- Curate your feed. Treat your mind how you treat your body. Don't feed your brain with constant garbage.
- Don't believe authoritative sources. Always try to get the full picture, instead of just leaning on one source, such as government, academia, or other institutions. Always ask for verification and proof.
- Cultivate and rely on strong bedrock principles, then you are less easily swayed by nonsense, fear and other feelings. Develop your inner compass.
- Choose what you want to focus on, consciously, for your long-term mental and physical health.
Lastly, someone said, if you get angry about something or someone; wait 24 hours until you respond. If you are still angry after 24 hours, then you can engage in a more conscious way.
I'm not perfect, and I'm constantly make mistakes, and its part of the journey. Failing is the greatest teacher.
They can't tell us what to think, but they can tell us what to think about. And within that small corridor, they can establish a good vs evil narrative. This warps your world view, no matter what "side" you are on.
In reality, there are no "sides".
So how do you stay sane in an insane world?
- Don't engage when you get emotionally triggered, and don't come to sudden conclusions about "current things" that you are not well versed in. You don't always have to have a strong opinion about stuff.
- Stop consuming content from channels that have a proven track record of psychological nudging such as corporate media, statist communication, and centralised social media.
- Curate your feed. Treat your mind how you treat your body. Don't feed your brain with constant garbage.
- Don't believe authoritative sources. Always try to get the full picture, instead of just leaning on one source, such as government, academia, or other institutions. Always ask for verification and proof.
- Cultivate and rely on strong bedrock principles, then you are less easily swayed by nonsense, fear and other feelings. Develop your inner compass.
- Choose what you want to focus on, consciously, for your long-term mental and physical health.
Lastly, someone said, if you get angry about something or someone; wait 24 hours until you respond. If you are still angry after 24 hours, then you can engage in a more conscious way.
I'm not perfect, and I'm constantly make mistakes, and its part of the journey. Failing is the greatest teacher.