All of us here know Tsuyoku Naritai. Some, maybe most people, though, take a certain perverted delight in admitting their flaws without any intent to fix them. Deeply involved here is both of the types of rationality we talk about; you need to know your own flaws (and not just profess that you have them and they exist), and you need to know what to do about them, in order to become better. The way will also teach you that merely trying is not enough; you must make a convulsive effort to accomplish even the smallest amount. Spencer Greenberg’s blog is dedicated to this art. Take a look at it! Clear, practical advice for problems that lots of people have. Rationality opens the door and helps you walk through it. Even so, it isn’t easy. If you try very hard and fail, you really have done worse than not trying at all. But the alternative is owning your flaws, thinking yourself better than you are.
Rationality opens the door to self-improvement:
All of us here know Tsuyoku Naritai. Some, maybe most people, though, take a certain perverted delight in admitting their flaws without any intent to fix them. Deeply involved here is both of the types of rationality we talk about; you need to know your own flaws (and not just profess that you have them and they exist), and you need to know what to do about them, in order to become better. The way will also teach you that merely trying is not enough; you must make a convulsive effort to accomplish even the smallest amount. Spencer Greenberg’s blog is dedicated to this art. Take a look at it! Clear, practical advice for problems that lots of people have. Rationality opens the door and helps you walk through it. Even so, it isn’t easy. If you try very hard and fail, you really have done worse than not trying at all. But the alternative is owning your flaws, thinking yourself better than you are.