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Hey friends,
On the flight back from Dubai I finally read an article thatβs been sitting in my Instapaper since January. Itβs calledΒ How I Attained Persistent Self-Love, or, I Demand Deep Okayness For Everyone,Β by this 30-something writer calledΒ Sasha Chapin.
And itβs pretty amazing. Sasha talks about how he struggled with self-love for most of his life: feeling essentially damaged, useless, unworthy of love. Until he reached his ideal state ofΒ Deep Okayness:
Deep Okayness is not the feeling that I am awesome all the time. Instead, it is the total banishment of self-loathing. It is the deactivation of the part of my mind that used to attack itself. Itβs the closure of the self as an attack surface. Itβs the intuitive understanding that I am merely one of the apertures through which the universe expresses itself, so why would I hate that? Itβs the sense that, while I might fuck up, my basic worth is beyond questionβI have no essential damage, I am not polluted, I am fine.
Now, I donβt struggle with self-loathing. But I probably do connect my self-worth a bit too much with external success: like worrying if people would still want to hang out with me if I lost my social status symbols (Cambridge, being a medic, YouTube, money). Because Iβve never lost that stuff, and havenβt taken big knocks in life, my inner self-criticism monster stays dormant. But that doesnβt mean itβs not there.
This was Sashaβs broad advice for achieving Deep Okayness:
Find ways to bring more and more of yourself into loving awareness.Β Every detail of your being. The ones you like, and the ones you donβt. Especially the ones you donβt, especially the parts that most repulse you. You know, loving awarenessβeven if you havenβt heard the phrase before, you know what it is. Those moments of spacious, calm, thorough, tranquil connection with whatever portion of existence youβre currently exposed to, where nothing is beingΒ challengedΒ orΒ conceptualized,Β but rather is just allowed to appear, in radiant suchness, without resistance or fear. That variety of existential condition.
This mightΒ seemΒ wishy-washy, and tech bros like me love to talk about βevidenceβbased practiceβ. But in reality, the evidence base around mental health is really, really, really bad. According to large-scale studies, we still donβt know, for example, whether CBT is more effective than drugs for treating depression.
When it comes to βbeing okayβ, it seems like science often does a worse job than traditional practices, sages, mystics, and fringe psychological therapies. Can we do more large-scale analyses on this type of stuff? Do techniques that really work get ignored because they seem too βwooβ?
So yeah, Sashaβs article hit hard. The weird thing is, I made a video calledΒ My Journey of Self-AcceptanceΒ last September, literally talking about βembracing the less desirable, the negative, the ugly sides of ourselvesβ. I guess this stuff needs time to sink in π€·
Have a great week!
Ali xx
My friend Tiago Forte is launching a new and massively improved version of his live, cohort-based courseΒ Building a Second Brain, where he teaches you how to build a knowledge management / note-taking system from the ground up.
Thereβs a pretty ridiculous list of bonuses for signing up this time, including a signed hardcover book shipped anywhere in the world that arrives before the official release date.
For more details on Cohort 14,Β follow this link.
π Book –Β LifespanΒ by David Sinclair. This book has been blowing my mind. Written by a professor of genetics at Harvard, itβs all about ageing and how to beat it. Some tips so far: avoid sugar, bread, and pasta; skip one meal a day; get your blood tested; donβt smoke; avoid plastic + excessive UV exposure; sleep in a cold bedroom, do cold exposure. Exerciseβ¦ π Iβve been listening toΒ Sinclairβs podcastΒ as well.
π΅Β Song –Β YouΒ byΒ Gabe Coulter. Iβve been playing this on repeat – reverby piano, amazing vocals. Highly recommend.
π¬Β YouTube Video –Β Fable of the Dragon Tyrant. Pretty hard-hitting vid by CGP Grey, based on a short story by the philosopher Nick Bostrom. Basically describes death and ageing as a massive dragon thatβs terrorised humanity for centuries, and thinks what would happen if we could finally defeat that dragon. Mentioned this inΒ issue 3 of Sunday SnippetsΒ way back in 2018 lol.
Whoever best describes the problem is the one most likely to solve it.
FromΒ The Personal MBAΒ by Josh Kaufman. Resurfaced usingΒ Readwise.