3 Ways We Refuse To Take Responsibility For Our Lives

low-angle photography of man in the middle of buidligns

Razvan Chisu on Unsplash

It is interesting to me how much power and agency the average middle-class person has and how often they refuse to use it. Power is a strange thing. Most people do not feel powerful. But I believe we choose not to recognize our own agency and abilities because then we would be responsible for using them, and that responsibility is a very frightening thing.

It is more comfortable to blame others for our unhappiness than to acknowledge that we are where we are largely through our own actions. I read something once along the lines of, “We all have what we want most.” That might seem contrary to your experience, but it’s not wrong. Many people would rather be safe than happy. They might say they want to be rich, but what they want is to continue spending money. They might say they want to meet someone and fall in love, but they would rather not risk rejection.

I have three favorite ways of avoiding responsibility in my own life, but I am sure there are many others. I’m sure I do many more that I haven’t realized yet. But I think if I can work on these, I will be a lot closer to where I want to be.

1. Caring more about being right than reaching goals.

This is a big one in every aspect of our lives. Instead of telling people how we want to be treated, we test them and judge them if they get it wrong. If we really want other people to make us happy, we should give them all the information they need to do that. And we should understand that to increase the chances of successfully getting what we want from them, we should not approach the subject as though we are a victim and they have wronged us. It might be true, but that doesn’t mean it will work.

In other areas, this could manifest as refusing to compromise your artistic vision to be successful (which is fine, but expect to be less successful), refusing to ask for opportunities or promotions because other people should realize you deserve them, or insisting on any course of action after it has been shown to not produce the results you want. On some level, people know what to do to get what they want. They just don’t believe they should have to do it.

2. Believing choices that would cause conflict are not options.

How often do we say, “I can’t do x, y, or x,” but we really mean that it would be uncomfortable or cause a conflict with someone else? This sounds like, “I can’t marry the person I want because my family wouldn’t approve,” or, “My husband won’t let me have male friends.” It’s nice that you don’t want to upset people, but you are making a choice. People do not have nearly as much control over you as they would like you to think.

It is not wrong to upset other people or say no. It’s unpleasant, but if you can learn to live with that feeling, you will finally be free.

You might say that you can’t stand up for yourself. But this probably doesn’t mean you can’t, it means that perhaps it makes you very anxious or you start crying. But you can still speak your mind even if you are crying. You do not have to do something perfectly for it to be effective.

Part of the reason why we are reluctant to risk conflict is we don’t have good conflict resolution skills. I personally have spent more of my life focusing on conflict avoidance skills. These boil down to trying to be polite, apologizing quickly, and giving in. To many people, it is a terrifying thing to honor your own wishes knowing that it will upset someone you love. Beneath that is the unspoken belief that they will no longer love you if you have caused them anger. We believe we do not have enough to offer to still be worth it after we have upset them. Which is strange, because the people who usually feel this way are upset by others all the time and still care about them.

The ironic thing is that we would not struggle so much with conflict if we weren’t expecting someone else to fulfill the needs we refuse to meet ourselves. The confrontation becomes weighted and intense because so much relies on the other person responding how we desire. On the flip side, every person who takes responsibility for their own happiness makes it easier for everyone around them to do the same. If I meet my own needs, I will not be upset by what you need to do to meet yours. If I know my boundaries, I will not be torn when you ask me to violate them. I will simply say no, calmly and politely, because what really affects us is feeling powerless. I will be upset by attempts to manipulate me if I fear that they might work. I will be upset by insults if I secretly agree with them. If I know who I am and that I deserve to be happy, I will have no desire to control someone else. (Or at least a significantly decreased desire. No one’s perfect.)

3. Externalizing insecurities and hoping others will fix them.

I have not thought about this one as much as the others, but I think it is still valid. I have noticed that people tend to gravitate towards those who see them the way they see themselves. That’s not inherently negative because hopefully the way you see yourself is not inherently negative. But let’s be realistic. It frequently is.

Instead of facing our self-doubt, we look for someone who doubts us as well and try to win their approval. If we can convince them, maybe this is proof that we should believe it ourselves. And this process only works with people who see the flaws we are self-conscious about.

I see this happen a lot in romantic relationships. People chase those who don’t like them because they don’t like themselves. It’s not very reassuring to prove yourself to someone who already likes you. This person just seems to have low standards to us. No, we want someone perhaps even harsher than ourselves. And this is why we stay with people who are critical and put us down. We think, “If I can get this person who hates x, y, or z about me to think I’m great, imagine how wonderful I must seem to all the people who already thought I was fine.” Perfectionism, the root of a lot of self-esteem issues, wants us to reach a state where we are immune to criticism or disapproval. So no wonder we would be more interested in the people who don’t value us. We really think they can’t exist for us to be okay.

If you value yourself, the whole conflict disappears. When you really, really value yourself, you realize how powerful and capable you are. And you force yourself to act on it even if it might be difficult at first. Growth is not supposed to be comfortable. Think of how much babies cry when they get teeth. But it’s all worth it in the end, because they finally get to eat real food.

How to Use Your Pain to Get Ahead

silhouette photo of man on cliff during sunset

Zac Durant on Unsplash

Life is a traumatic event and everything we do is a coping mechanism. Some coping mechanisms are just more socially acceptable than others.

Some of our greatest triumphs are the result of attempting to escape our suffering. And because that suffering doesn’t go anywhere, we have an endless source of motivation, spurring us on to greater and greater heights. Does it make sense to run from pain when you’ll never escape it? No, not really, but logic doesn’t hold most people back, so don’t let it stop you either.

Society looks down on people who feel like they have a void inside, as if this is due to a lack of personal development. But the natural response to a void is to create or find something to fill it. This, in essence, is productivity. They say necessity is the mother of invention, but maybe it’s deep personal pain. Maybe they’re the same thing.

Before I continue, I would like to say there is a level of pain where you can’t get out of bed, and a slightly lower level of pain, where you get out of bed but spend all day trying to prove your worth. Psychiatrists exist for the first. Paychecks exist because of the second. This article is about aiming for the second, not the first.

Suffering and insecurity are responsible for many of the positive elements in our lives, or even physical things we enjoy. Would obnoxious sports cars exist if poorly-endowed men didn’t? Would Marilyn Monroe’s movie career have happened if her father had loved her? (Daddy issues are responsible for many things on the internet but I’m not going to get into that here.) I for one become funnier when I am tired or unhappy because stress lowers my concern for my dignity.

I believe our innate brokenness is responsible for most of our social relationships. If people were as emotionally self-sufficient as self-love twitter tells us we should be, they wouldn’t connect with others very much. But to triumph over loneliness while remaining alone is not really an admirable goal. If we did not experience pain in being alone, we would have no motivation to tolerate the pain inherent in existing with other people. A problematic level of suffering makes us accept abuse and toxicity just because it’s better than being alone, but a nice, reasonable level of pain pushes us to do scary things like leave the house and speak to other people. I certainly wouldn’t do it if the alternative wasn’t so much worse.

Pain not only gives you friends, it makes you work harder. The only reason I’m writing this blog post at all is because I asked a friend to publicly shame me if I did not publish a post every Thursday. I’m not motivated enough by the desire to improve myself, get somewhere in life, or be successful. I don’t have a clear vision of my future or a lot of self-discipline. But what I do have is an endless reservoir of shame, and it’s time I got something out of it besides insomnia. I doubt I would even have a blog if I genuinely loved myself.

If you are anxious or an overthinker, you are the perfect candidate for this method. My current strategy to avoid having thoughts is to crochet constantly. This has the added benefit of impressing friends and family, a great band-aid on the lack of social acceptance I experienced as a child. The only drawback is severe eyestrain and a return to the migraine medication I haven’t needed since I stopped teaching high school. But everything has a plus side, and painkillers are definitely, definitely not an exception.

How exactly you make your pain work for you depends greatly on your individual methods of suffering. Consider getting therapy to unearth the root causes of your issues so that you can exploit them more adeptly. As a general rule, though, failure of any kind is a push forward because you have less to lose. What you fear has already happened. There’s no way but up. If you continue to fail, at least that’s not as scary as change! Phoebe Buffay covered this topic better than I ever could in this commencement speech.

A few people have asked me what the point is of some of these “self-help” articles I write. After I wrote “Life Hacks For The Emotionally Stunted,” someone remarked, “I don’t feel like I’m supposed to follow this advice.” My purpose is not, actually, to tell anyone how to live correctly. It’s just to make you look at things from a different perspective. Maybe life is not as bad as you think. Maybe it’s actually much worse. You decide.