Well, being a stoic for such a long time means my reflex is usually, “What is useful here?” And when I run that check on kvetching, it doesn’t make the cut. Sometimes I pretend to feel guiltier, since most people read practicality as callousness, but internally, I focus on, “What different action should I take or new data should I look for?”
ETA: Actually, the other check that helps me is asking: “Is there a causal link between my feeling bad and my being helpful?” Usually, no, or if there is, it does the opposite of what I’d like!
It’s blame in the sense of responsibility, not in the sense of just feeling bad. I tend to frame things in terms of heroic responsibility, but a bit more regatively—in terms of negligence. Every day I go out and sin against people, by commission or omission (or, in a more secular phrasing: every day I go out and metaphorically punch a few people in the face, in my thoughts and in my deeds, in what I have done, and what I have failed to do).
The reason I use the word ‘blame’ is because the harm I inflict on others is real and it’s not alright. The fact that I haven’t figured out how to be less negligent, more empathetic, etc does not magically mitigate their hurt. I use the word blame because working out right actions is not an abstract question that I plan to apply in the future, it’s something I’m doing fumblingly enough to hurt people now, so I’d better improve right quick.
Well, being a stoic for such a long time means my reflex is usually, “What is useful here?” And when I run that check on kvetching, it doesn’t make the cut. Sometimes I pretend to feel guiltier, since most people read practicality as callousness, but internally, I focus on, “What different action should I take or new data should I look for?”
ETA: Actually, the other check that helps me is asking: “Is there a causal link between my feeling bad and my being helpful?” Usually, no, or if there is, it does the opposite of what I’d like!
That’s the productive question. Blaming yourself is unproductive.
It’s blame in the sense of responsibility, not in the sense of just feeling bad. I tend to frame things in terms of heroic responsibility, but a bit more regatively—in terms of negligence. Every day I go out and sin against people, by commission or omission (or, in a more secular phrasing: every day I go out and metaphorically punch a few people in the face, in my thoughts and in my deeds, in what I have done, and what I have failed to do).
The reason I use the word ‘blame’ is because the harm I inflict on others is real and it’s not alright. The fact that I haven’t figured out how to be less negligent, more empathetic, etc does not magically mitigate their hurt. I use the word blame because working out right actions is not an abstract question that I plan to apply in the future, it’s something I’m doing fumblingly enough to hurt people now, so I’d better improve right quick.