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Archive for the ‘life’ Category

Arthur C Clarke proposed three “laws” or principles about prediction –

  1. When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong.
  2. The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.
  3. Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

There’s a lot of noise these days about “anti-science” – I find this a strange term actually. It’s about as useful as “anti-art” or “anti-philosophy”. “Science” is not a discreet entity. It’s a way of thinking. Deleuze really clarified this for us. He said science was a way of thinking about function. That’s a good summary in my opinion. I enjoy science because it helps me to understand how things work (sometimes!). Deleuze went on to point out that philosophy was a way of thinking about concepts and art about percepts and affects. These great human endeavours – of science, philosophy and art – give us very different ways to think about our lives and the world we live in. Each way of thinking can potentially be illuminating. But it isn’t a competition. The one way of thinking takes nothing away from either of the others.

So when distinguished but elderly scientists claim that “science” is under attack, I fear they’re misguided. What they probably mean is that their world-view is being challenged. Scientists should challenge each other. They should continuously enter into rational debate with each other. But science (thinking about function) is only one way of understanding experience. What’s the science of love? What’s the science of poetry? What’s the science of Shakespeare? Yes, you can take a scientific approach to any of those subjects but there are better ways to understand love and literature.

Health is an interesting case. It’s actually hard to understand. We know when we’ve got it and when we haven’t, but what is it actually? Science can help us to understand a lot about health by helping us to find out how organisms function. But philosophy and art can also help us to understand health, because health is an idea, a concept and an experience too.

So when “scientists” dismiss experiences which they can’t make sense of, it is worth while considering what they have to say, but it’s important not to make the mistake of thinking they are telling the Truth, the Whole Truth and Nothing but the Truth. There’s more to life than understanding function and there’s more to life than we currently regard as possible. We, the human race, progress by not accepting that something is impossible. Progress involves discovering that much more is possible than you previously thought. Daniel Gilbert writes about this very nicely in his Stumbling on Happiness. He says when imagining the future we are always limited by what we know now. Futurologists tend to imagine versions of the present rather than the radically different futures which actually transpire.

I love life at the edge of discovery. It’s like magic.

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I’ve been reading some of the happiness literature recently. Not because I’m not happy – I am! But mainly because the area of medicine in which I work is based on two things – taking a holistic view, which really just means engaging with a person instead of just a person’s disease! And, secondly, it’s based on trying to aid recovery and increase resilience, as opposed to just trying to rescue a situation, or repair some damaged tissues. There’s a lot involved in helping someone to get better including enabling self-understanding, instilling hope, encouraging a positive attitude, as well as tackling disease processes. I’m especially interested in an approach to medical care which seeks to understand the uniqueness of each and every patient I see and enabling them to develop in the face of their illnesses – by develop I mean to adapt, to become more creative and to be more fully engaged with their lives (see here)
I read The Happiness Hypothesis and thoroughly enjoyed it. Thought provoking and enlightening. I then moved on to Stumbling on Happiness, by Daniel Gilbert (ISBN 978-0-00-718313-5). These two authors have completely different styles but both are tackling the question of what makes people happy. Gilbert’s book is much more a psychologists approach – in fact, I’d go as far as to say an experimental psychologist’s approach. In the opening chapters he lays out his strong belief that the way to understand how the human mind works is to study phenomena of large numbers of people. He says we can’t rely on the experiences of individuals but we can rely on phenomena which can be demonstrated time and again in group studies. That made me a bit uncomfortable because as a clinician I find that often the statistical “evidence” from group trials turns out not to be appropriate for an individual. Drugs are a great example of this. There isn’t a single painkiller on the market which you can guarantee will take away the pain of a particular patient. It doesn’t matter how many hundreds of thousands of people have benefited from a particular treatment, this particular patient today may well turn out to be the one who gets no response at all. We see the same phenomenon with blood pressure pills, sleeping pills, anything really. Obviously a doctor should recommend the safest treatment which seems to have helped a significant number of patients but he or she must remain open to understanding that for this patient this pill just might not work. We are all actually different. I’ll return to this issue shortly.

I really didn’t want to like Gilbert’s book because of the cover. It looks cheap and puerile. However, you can’t judge a book by its cover! Once I started to read it, I loved it. I’ve read criticisms of his familiar, humorous writing style but it really works for me. It’s a treat to read and it often made me laugh. His cultural references, especially to Beatles songs hit the spot for me. The content was fascinating too. OK, many of these studies published by psychologists have been written about in other books, but Daniel Gilbert presented a fair number of interesting studies which I’ve never read anywhere else.

After a while, psychology experiment after psychology experiment begins to feel like a magic show. So often the result is a surprise. I could almost hear “abracadabra!” in the background! This is fun and interesting but its novelty begins to wane. (Actually his section on magic tricks themselves is particularly interesting – check this post) Throughout the book he held my interest, and he made a good, clear case for the claim that memory, perception and imagination are all imperfect representations of reality –

Foresight is just as fallible as eyesight and hindsight.

I have no doubts about that. However, for me, I’m more comfortable with the understanding that memory, perception and imagination are all creative processes – individual, subjective, creative processes.

Having demonstrated that we are not reliable judges of either what did make us happy, or what will make us happy, he ends up with a recommendation that totally baffled me. In his final chapter (the one before the “Afterword”) he seeks to answer the question “how should we decide what to do?” Somewhat astonishingly he says that as we can’t rely on our memories or our imagination, we should rely on the experiences of others. He claims this will work because we have an over-inflated sense of our individuality and uniqueness. He says “What makes us think we’re so damned special?” and argues “Our mythical belief in the variability and uniqueness of individuals is the main reason why we refuse to use others as surrogates……..surrogation is a cheap and effective way to predict one’s future emotions, but because we don’t realise just how similar we all are, we reject this reliable method…”

Pardon?

The best way to predict how I’m going to feel in a situation is to ask others who have already been in that situation? Yes, I understand the importance of empathy and of sharing stories and learning from others, but, you know something? There’s only ONE Daniel Gilbert! And there’s only ONE me! I liked some of the same Beatles songs as you, Daniel, but I don’t rate statistics and experimental psychology as highly as you do because we’ve lead different lives, in different cultures with a myriad of different experiences.

Just stop for a moment and think about taking his recommendation to rely on the reports of others to predict how you’re going to feel in a certain situation. When was the last time you read a movie review, went to see the movie and had such a different experience from the reviewer that you thought “did we see the same movie?!” In “Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?” you can go 50/50, phone a friend or ask the audience – you might get some clues from what they say but they don’t always give you the right answer – why not? Well Daniel Gilbert answers that himself – they too are humans with fallible memories, fallible perception and fallible imagination. Why should the report of someone else be more reliable than what I know about myself?

I think there are two crucial elements missing from this exploration of happiness – narrative and the importance of meaning. We experience life through the creation of stories – the stories we tell others and the stories we tell ourselves. Storytelling involves using memory, perception and imagination. Through the creation of stories we gain a sense of self AND we make sense of our experiences. Human beings are meaning-seeking, meaning-creating creatures. And two people in the same circumstance will have vastly different experiences because the circumstance is interpreted differently, made sense of differently, means something different to each of them.

Yes, yes, yes, we share more than we often realise. With a bit of empathy we can realise just how much we do share with other people, but I insist, we are all different, all unique and, you know what?

YOU ARE SPECIAL!

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Daniel Gilbert says in his book, Stumbling on Happiness, that research shows us that people regret the things they DON’T do much more than they regret the things that they do.

Do you agree? Do you think you’re more likely to regret what you DON’T do…..maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of your life?

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Last weekend’s Sunday Herald carried an article about Edwyn Collins. The headline spread over two pages was “I’m happy basically….but before my stroke, I wasn’t really”. Well, as you might imagine, that caught my attention.

Edwyn Collins is a singer. You maybe remember his 1994 hit “A girl like you”

Just over couple of years ago, aged 44, he suffered a stroke. A serious stroke, paralysing his right side and taking away his speech. But here’s a man who doesn’t give up. Through determined rehab with incredible loving support from his wife he’s not only singing again but is about to release a new album. Although right handed he’s also taught himself how to draw again using his left hand! It’s an amazing interview.

I have a stroke to deal with. But I’m feeling positive. And feeling relaxed, and generally focussed on things. I’m relaxed and dreaming all the time. So my life is happy at the moment. I feel connected. I feel alive again.

His wife adds

I think you’re a better tempered person. You cope. And you have patience. And you’re not self-pitying at all. You’re not even depressed………We’ve got so much to feel…….

and Edwyn finishes her sentence

…..to feel grateful for.

Well, what do you think? Health and the absence of disease are not the same. It’s wrong of us to write people off who have a chronic illness or disability. You can experience “health” in both the absence and the presence of disease.

This is a story of someone who believes their life got better through the experience of recovery from illness (same kind of story Lance Armstrong tells in his autobiography, It’s Not About the Bike). Notice the elements of Edwyn’s story. All of these were involved, sorry, are involved in his recovery –

  • hope
  • loving relationships
  • determination
  • patience
  • an absence of self-pity
  • a capacity to cope
  • creativity
  • music
  • drawing
  • slowing down
  • reflection
  • dreaming
  • gratitude

Worth thinking about?

Finally, when I searched for him on youtube I first found A Girl Like You but then I found this – I’m sorry I can’t show that video clip here, the person who posted it to youtube has disabled embedding but please follow that link and listen to the lyrics. “Make Me Feel Again” was recorded in 1993. Don’t you think that’s amazing?

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I have a habit of buying the Guardian on a Thursday. It’s the Technology section that attracts me but I usually enjoy the whole paper. Do you ever read obituaries? I don’t often but I really should make a point of doing so more often. Reading an obituary of Hans Georg Gadamer in the Japan Times a few years ago completely changed my understanding of health and opened the doors for me to a mysterious and previously unexplored (by me) section of the bookstores – philosophy.

Today I read the obituary of Norman Cohn. No, I’d never heard of him either. He died aged 92 and this phrase was the first one in the obituary to catch my eye –

as a lecturer in French at Glasgow University (1946-51), he embarked on the studies that would make his reputation, despite having no formal training as an historian. Indeed, his very unorthodoxy may account for the originality of his insights.

Isn’t that such a great insight? How often does “formal training” and orthodoxy crush innovation and originality? The subject of his studies and publications was the recurrent myths which continue to underpin the demonisation and destruction of whole groups of people.

As Cohn himself pointed out, all his work was fundamentally concerned with the study of the same phenomenon: “the urge to purify the world through the annihilation of some category of human beings imagined as agents of corruption and incarnations of evil”.

This statement by writer, Richard Webster, really grabbed my attention –

The key to his extraordinary achievement perhaps lay in the fact that in his own life the personal and political were never severed, and matters of the heart were as important to him as matters of the head

Here was a man who obviously lived in a holistic passionate and highly individualistic way. His first wife, Vera, who he married in 1941, was

daughter of Menshevik revolutionaries, who had previously lived in a ménage à trois with Raoul Hausmann, one of the founders of Dada.

She died aged 96 and he subsequently married for a second time. Richard Webster, writes –

When I last met him in December 2004, he was genial, hospitable, radiant with his recent marriage to her and looking forward to a late honeymoon in Provence during which he would celebrate his 90th birthday.

And concludes

His greatness will always reside in the manner he combined deep scholarship with a passionate zest for life.

Wow! Is this an inspirational life, or what?

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My virtue map

In another post I’ve described this idea of virtues. What interests me is this. Which characteristics and qualities would I hope to develop in my life? I believe that we all create our own personal hero narratives as the main way of having a sense of self and of growing and developing that self. This kind of life project of growth has been variously described by other authors. Jung focussed on what he termed “individuation”. The evolutionary biologists, contemporary neuroscientists, and neurophilosophers have all shown that human beings are continuously in a process of development of strengths, characteristics and qualities.

I’ve conducted my own synthesis of Franklin’s and Seligman’s virtues and strengths to come up with a personal virtue map.

Here’s an image of the map –

mindomoexport.jpg

You’ll see this has five main “nodes” – each of these refers to a major virtue cluster – Wisdom in the middle (because for me that’s the centre of it all), then Calm, Action, Transcendence and Temperance. Around each of these nodes I’ve picked a few qualities or characteristics that I’d like to be part of how I grow.

Here’s a summary –

Wisdom (which is about awareness of the world)

  • Curiosity
  • Love of Learning
  • Creativity
  • Understanding

Curiosity and Love of Learning are simply what they are – reflecting, enquiring and learning.

Creativity encompasses the ideas of ingenuity, of novelty, and of emergence.

Understanding encompasses the ideas of perspective, judgement, emotional intelligence and empathy.

Calm (stillness and serenity)

  • Silence
  • Tranquillity
  • Slow

Silence is about finding times without talking, without music or noise. It’s also about valuing conversation, not trivialising it.

Tranquillity is that calm that allows you to remain unflustered or unfazed in the face of trivial difficulties and random events.

Slow is about taking your time, savouring and relishing what you are doing.

Action (engaging with the world and with people)

  • Resolution
  • Perseverance
  • Industry
  • Sincerity
  • Kindness
  • Fairness

Resolution is deciding to do certain things and actually doing what’s been resolved to do.

Perseverance is sticking at something to see it through.

Industry is about being active

Sincerity, kindness and fairness are values which can be used to assess the quality of acts towards others.

Temperance (living within limits)

  • Moderation
  • Frugality

Moderation is about enjoying something without spoiling it by taking it to excess.

Frugality is about not being wasteful, spending productively and well.

Transcendence (living beyond our selves)

  • Appreciation of beauty
  • Gratitude
  • Hope
  • Humour
  • Zest

Appreciation of beauty in all things – the physical world, people, the Arts.

Gratitude and hope are the building blocks of positivity. Gratitude looks back and keeps positive experiences alive whilst hope looks forward and creates the conditions for positive experiences in the future.

Humour and zest are forms of passion. Humour is a lightening of the heart and zest is an energy of the heart.

So, what’s next? I created the mindmap using Mondomo (the map’s name is “virtues”) and exported it as a jpeg which I’ve now printed out onto a 6 x 4 inch index card. I’ll start carrying it around with me and my idea is reflect on it every morning and every evening. By doing that I hope I’ll bring focus and intention to these “virtues” – and if they’re worth developing, I’ll experience the payoff in an increased quality of my life. I’ll keep you posted!

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Virtues

My brain seems to work in a particular kind of a way. It’s good at spotting connections, building patterns. I’d say it’s a creative brain. When I read a book certain words or passages ring bells, make lights flash, prod my memory of other passages I’ve read elsewhere and I build on what’s already there, not just in a way that gives me more knowledge in my store, but, rather, more dynamically creates something new. Some new understanding that can change my view of who I am and what kind of world I live in.

In my consulting room I find that’s one of the crucial questions I want to find the answer to – what kind of world does this person live in?

I think we all have brains that work that way actually. I think that’s how we learn, connecting new experiences and observations to our previous ones. It’s a constant process and, at best, it increases our understanding.

Sometimes the connections seem quite serendipitous. Do you get that? When a particular word or phrase or idea seems to keep popping up everywhere for a while? I don’t mean the obvious recurrences which come from reading a few books on the same subject area. I mean they pop up in books, newspaper articles, movies, song lyrics and so on. I’m sure I could write a post or two on specific words that do that but let me tell you about one of the ones that’s popping up just now – virtue.

Now this is a word I’d say I probably have never used and it’s not even a word that has held any appeal for me, but I was reading The Happiness Hypothesis recently and came across Jonathon Haidt’s discussion of virtues. He begins by telling of Benjamin Franklin (you can read about his virtues here). I’m a Scot living in Scotland but I quote Benjamin Franklin almost every day. Not a wide range of quotes mind, just one. However, this was a brand new story and it intrigued me. What do I do when something catches my interest? Google it, of course. Well, Franklin’s virtues sounded a bit archaic to me but his little descriptions of each one I thought revealed a man of remarkable insight and balance. But they didn’t feel quite right for me.

Haidt goes on to link this idea of virtues both to the ancient Greek and religious virtues and to the modern practice of positive psychology. That lead me to pick my two Seligman books off my shelves again and remind myself what he’s said. I say remind myself but to be honest I had no recollection of him using the term virtues at all so it was really going back to notice what I failed to notice first time round. Seligman’s virtues seemed different from Franklin’s. Different but not completely different (sorry, this is the way my mind works but now I’m thinking, I wonder what Monty Python’s virtues are? OK, back to the subject) You can read about Seligman’s virtues here.

What I did next was what I often do with such things. I sat in a cafe with a notebook and pen and wrote the words down over a two page spread. It’s a kind of mind mapping technique (not the fancy Tony Buzan variety, just a simple way of seeing connections and patterns). What I do is take the key words or phrases that are bubbling in my brain and write them out not randomly but in clusters so that words which have some connection for me are written close to each other and those that don’t seem so strongly connected are written further apart. Am I making that clear? I should take some photos of the process cos its actually quite a visual thing.

That gave me three clusters of Franklin’s virtues and four of Seligman’s. Only two of the clusters overlapped. (more…)

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When I read Authentic Happiness by Martin Seligman I was very taken by the notion of identifying your strengths and building on them (as opposed to the more traditional New Year’s Resolution method of picking out your greatest weaknesses and hopelessly wrestling with them!). At the time, somehow, I missed his reference to “virtues”. Then when I read The Happiness Hypothesis recently, Jonathon Haidt’s description of virtues and his reinforcement of the idea of a link between ancient virtues and the findings of positive psychology sent me back to read Seligman’s book again. And there it is, clearly, in black and white – he lists what he says are the SIX main virtues (dropping seven of Franklin’s?) and the 24 “strengths” which lead to the development of those virtues.

Here are his SIX virtues –

  1. Wisdom
  2. Courage
  3. Humanity
  4. Justice
  5. Temperance
  6. Transcendence

Quite different from Franklin’s, at least, at first sight.

Let me summarise his “signature strengths” for you. These lead up to the virtues.

Wisdom

  • Curiosity
  • Love of learning
  • Judgement
  • Ingenuity
  • Emotional intelligence
  • Perspective

Courage

  • Valor
  • Perseverance
  • Integrity

Humanity

  • Kindness
  • Loving

Justice

  • Citizenship
  • Fairness
  • Leadership

Temperance

  • Self-control
  • Prudence
  • Humility

Transcendence

  • Appreciation of beauty and excellence
  • Gratitude
  • Hope
  • Spirituality
  • Forgiveness
  • Humor
  • Zest

Now, I’m sure you’ll see when we come down to the level of what Seligman calls strengths there is considerably more overlap with Franklin’s virtues. However, there are significant differences.

If you’d like to read more about Seligman’s Signature Strengths and Virtues I suggest you go have a look at his website (it’s free) and read the book Authentic Happiness.

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I was inspired recently reading about Benjamin Franklin’s virtues tool for personal growth. Apparently he wanted to continuously improve his character so he read a lot about virtues to see what people said about the qualities and characteristics a person might hope to develop. He summarised the various authors by collecting together the 13 virtues which he thought most authors agreed.

He then made himself a chart with the 13 virtues down the first column and the seven days of the week making up the other columns. Every day he reflected on his behaviour and put a black mark in any box where he felt he had acted in a way which failed a particular virtue. He did this throughout his adult life, focussing on one particular virtue each week to improve himself.

He showed himself his improvement through the decline in the numbers and spread of black marks.

Now I have issues with that particular method but I’ll return to that in another post.

The 13 particular virtues are interesting and although written in what now seems old fashioned language, the principles he elaborates in relation to each virtue show he had a thoughtful, tolerant and balanced approach to virtues.

Have a look at them. What do you think? Would you sign up to all of these? If not, which would you remove from your list? And would you add any he hasn’t included?

If you want to follow in his footsteps you can download of pdf of his chart here and use it either as a standalone or as an integral part of the marvelous HipsterPDA project!

Here they are –

  • Temperance – eat not to dullness; drink not to elevation
  • Silence – speak not but what may benefit others or yourself;
    avoiding trifling conversations
  • Order – let all your things have their places; let each part of
    your business have its time
  • Resolution – resolve to perform what you ought;
    perform without fail what you resolve
  • Frugality – make no expense but to do good to others
    or yourself; that is, waste nothing
  • Industry – lose not time; be always employed in
    something useful; cut off unnecessary actions
  • Sincerity – use no hurtful deceit; think innocently and justly;
    speak accordingly
  • Justice – wrong none by doing injuries or omitting
    the benefits that are your duty
  • Moderation – avoid extremes; forbear resenting injuries
    so much as you think you deserve
  • Cleanliness – tolerate no uncleanliness in body,
    clothes or habitation
  • Tranquillity – be not disturbed at trifles or accidents
    common or avoidable
  • Chastity – rarely use venery but for health or offspring;
    never to dullness, weakness, or the injury of our own
    or another’s peace or reputation
  • Humilty – imitate Jesus and Socrates

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Julia Hasselberg

I found myself captivated by this portrait of Julia Hasselberg painted by Eva Bonnier. Eva Bonnier was a Swedish artist and this painting is of her lover’s illegitimate daughter who Eva adopted after Julia’s father’s death.

This girl has a look which is very familiar to me. It’s a combination of pain and resilience. There’s reserve, distance, independence and spirit here. The kind of spirit that emerges from suffering to strengthen and protect. I find it both moving and powerful.

You can find this portrait and others by Eva Bonnier along with a really interesting short biography of her on the Giornale Nuovo blog. Thank you for posting this Mr h.

All Eva Bonnier’s portraits which you’ll see in that post share these characteristics for me. These are powerful people, fiercely independent, with that special kind of strength which emerges from suffering. One thing that fascinates me is this description of Eva Bonnier

She is reputed to have been an intelligent, strong-willed and sharp-tongued woman who ‘could neither in private nor as an artist charm or flatter her contemporaries.’

How much does the character of the artist influence their portraits of others? How much do they see a bit of themselves in their subjects and, unconsciously, highlight those qualities in them? What do you think Ester?

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