Keep Your Identity Fluid [LINK]
Building on Graham’s Small Identity, here I look at the hazards of identity, and give a suggestion for leveraging it to your advantage, as well as avoiding pitfalls.
As per my last article, feel free to let me know what you think here, privately, or anonymously.
Link.
Kevin Simler’s Prickles and Goo is also related: he talks about the advantages and disadvantages of having “prickly” (strong, solid) and “gooey” (weak, flexible) identities:
Great stuff thanks.
I’ve thought of this advice to keep identity small as installing a new executive-level program, “Monitor group affiliations with potentially mind-killing emotional attachments”. Since I’ve done that, it seems like all my attachments have become a lot more gooey.
Great related article: http://www.newyorker.com/science/maria-konnikova/i-dont-want-to-be-right
This seems like a much more palatable idea to me than refusing to affiliate myself with groups and ideologies. (I really like affiliation, as long as I like the group.) This is also useful because I can best work towards certain goals by being a member of certain groups, and those groups tend to prefer members who genuinely care about a number of unrelated goals.
Thanks!
I keep finding analogies that let me post this paper all over the place, but here you go: http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~nitish/msc_thesis.pdf
I had enough Buddhist influence in my life that I used to find the idea of an identity at all downright ludicrous: are you saying not only that there is such a thing as a “me”, but that me is even a specific thing or an instance of a kind?
An identity that is chosen sounds so ridiculous to me that I don’t even know why people do it, maybe it is grasping for straws to avoid admitting a “me” does not exist.
However, I can understand identity as something given to you by birth and you do not cast it away because you realize people with the same identity are oppressed or just for whatever reason suffering and need a hand up.
Funny that the first word of a post rejecting the concept of an identity is “I”.
Try dialing down the ridicule. No arguments are made, but you manage to call the opposing ideas ludicrous and ridiculous.
Also try dialing up the empathy. There are some reasons for embracing any belief beyond being unable to accept one’s own error. Try to understand why someone might believe or act in a different way.