show or confirm the effectiveness or worthiness of something
When these ideas are shown by events to be reasonably accurate, that is, our ideas are validated, we feel secure in ourselves, but when they are proved wrong, we feel that we are falling apart.
On the other hand, when we say, “I’m shattered,” or “I’m losing my grip,” we might not be using cliches to describe a bad day but talking about something quite terrifying that we are experiencing: our sense of who we are is being challenged.
Our positive emotions are interpretations to do with safety, while the multitude of negative emotions define the particular kind of danger and its degree.
Feeling self-confident, we can rejoice in our friend’s success at a new job; feeling inferior, we see danger and try to defend ourselves with: “It’s not fair.”
the line indicating the limit or extent of something
We create a mental image of our friends, and we want to keep them within the bounds of that image. Our need to do this can override our ability to see our friends in the way they see themselves.
We create a mental image of our friends, and we want to keep them within the bounds of that image. Our need to do this can override our ability to see our friends in the way they see themselves.
Falling out with a friend shows us that our image of them, from which we derive our predictions about that friend, is wrong; and if that is the case, our sense of being a person is threatened.
Created on Tue May 26 11:49:39 EDT 2020
(updated Fri May 29 14:04:01 EDT 2020)
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