Jul. 18th, 2011

Wrong Road

Jul. 18th, 2011 06:27 pm
joreth: (Bad Joreth)
Wrong Road
Notice the paths that happy and successful people take, and avoid those paths. Favor the popular paths since those will help you achieve average results at best, and average results should safely prevent undesirable feelings of fulfillment. The best roads are those that leave you feeling like you’re walking in circles till you’re too tired to walk anymore and must retire. Roads that are flat or which slope downhill are often good choices, and they tend to satisfy the popularity requirement as well. Avoid any paths that lead over hills or near mountains; the elevated views are disturbing. Head towards terrain you dislike since it’s easier to hate your life when you hate your surroundings. If you can manage to get lost as well, that’s wonderful.


http://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2011/07/how-to-do-everything-wrong/

In conversations where I explain what I have done or seen done that leads to success, either in relationships, in work, in life in general, whatever, I often get the following response: "Some of us are not as enlighted as you, so we won't take your advice." And yes, people have actually used the phrase "as enlightened as you", and not because I ever made that claim myself.

Now, I get that, in some circumstances, Person A can look at Person B and see a happy, successful person, but not want to actually be like Person B. I mean, I see plenty of happy and successful Hollywood actors, but I don't want to be an actor. That's not what I'm talking about here. I'm talking about Person A wanting the same outcome as Person B, but not wanting to learn how Person B got there. Basically, Person A is reinventing the wheel, only he's making it square.

What this kind of response and attitude says is this:

I see that you are happy and successful at something that I want to be happy and successful at. But rather than trying to take the lessons you have learned and apply them to my own life, I am going to do the exact opposite in the hopes that doing exactly what you did not do, I will somehow learn the skills and lessons that you learned and end up with the same result as you, because what you did is scary and I want all the benefits without the growing pains. I want what you have, but I will not take even remotely similar paths to get what you have, and I will expect those paths to end at the same destination. Meanwhile, I will be utterly dismissive of everything you have learned about how you got where you did.

These are the people who want to learn how to be less jealous & more secure, but do things that are designed to foster, encourage, and protect insecurity. These are the people who want to protect themselves against STDs but stick their head in the sand so that they're practically inviting STDs. These are the people who want to get ahead in business, but go out of their way to burn bridges and alienate the support that all people "at the top" need to stay at the top. These are the people who want lots of money but don't want to actually *do* anything for it, like, work. These are the people who want social change but end up supporting the status quo by their actions, or inaction. These are the people who whine about how much their life sucks while opportunity after opportunity pass right by. These are the "nice guys" who can't "get a girl" who argue with women explaining to them what they're doing to turn them off. These are the people who want so desperately to be With Someone that they can't see how that desperation is exactly the thing turning people away.

To paraphrase Miss Poly Manners, there might, indeed, be no single Right Way, but there ARE plenty of Wrong Ways. This is one of them.
joreth: (sex)
I made a twitter comment about STDs not being punishment for bad behaviour, and the reason is because I have been faced with several people recently who feel as though they did something WRONG to have gotten, or even just possibly been exposed to, an STD.  Someone responded that they may not be punishment for bad behaviour, but they are punishment for bad decisions.  WRONG.  We have a stupidly enormous social stigma over STDs that is WAY out of proportion to the illnesses themselves, in comparison to similar other illnesses.

For example, if you tell someone that you caught chicken pox, well, that sucks, and it could even be dangerous. But no one thinks that you're a bad person, or that you did a bad thing, for coming in contact with someone who had chicken pox, thereby catching it yourself. Yet tell someone you have herpes, and suddenly you're a slut, a whore, you put yourself at risk, you made a bad decision, even though herpes is in the same family as chicken pox and, in fact, is so closely related, that you can test positive for HSV just because you had the chicken pox as a kid.

Life is risky, and viruses and bacteria all want to live and propegate as much as we do, so they will do anything they can in order to acheive that goal. That means that we are all at risk, all the time. Yes, some things are riskier than others, which is why I advocate safer sex and spend a great deal of time explaining how to do that. But sex is not the only way to catch something, and it's not even the best or most common way to catch something.

Herpes is often transmitted from parent to child via goodnight kisses. Virgins as young as 9, with no history of sexual molestation, show HPV in their skin cells. You can get an STD by having only one partner EVER, or sometimes even by having no partners ever.

I caught strep throat pretty much every year from 6th grade through high school. I was distinctly unpopular at that age, so it wasn't from making out with boys, it's just that easy to catch. I also caught pink eye about 3 times in one year, for no reason that I could ever figure out.  I also caught Scarlet Fever when no one I knew had it.  I also caught Whooping Cough, again, when no one I knew had it.

Mono used to be called The Kissing Disease. I caught it when I was 12. No, I didn't kiss anyone.  In fact, my next door neighbor, a boy about a year older than me, also had mono, and we were both teased mercilessly as people suspected we had been kissing, when the truth of the matter was he hated me and would rather beat me up than kiss me.

I also caught hepatitis before I started having sexual relationships.

I also caught HPV when I had only 2 sexual partners ever.

Now that I'm an adult and have had quite a few more than 2 partners ever, I consistently test negative for all STDs, and I also rarely get strep throat anymore. I did not catch these illnesses because of bad decisions or bad behaviour. I caught them because I'm human.

You could possibly argue that a person who takes risks that you think are unreasonable is someone who is making bad decisions, or engaged in "bad" behaviour. But STDs are not punishment for that - it's a totally separate issue. They are a risk, and a consequence, to living, just as all illnesses are. Certain things have higher risks than others. But they are not punishment, and having an STD does not make you a bad person. It makes you a person with a virus or a bacteria. That's it.

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