The Gentle Rebel Podcast
Do You Have Enough Courage to Be Disliked?
I recently finished reading, The Courage to Be Disliked: How to Free Yourself, Change Your Life, and Achieve Real Happiness by Kishimi and Koga. It's a great introduction to Adlerian psychology; the school of thought developed after Austrian psychotherapist, Alfred Adler. Not someone I had been familiar with, despite being a contemporary of Freud and Jung.
In this week's podcast I share a few initial takeaways from the book, which hooked me right from its title. There was something within me which connected to the idea of finding the courage to be disliked. I bet it will strike a chord with many introverts and highly sensitive people too.
It's not that I want to be disliked. No one wants that. And that's not what this is about. But rather learning to accept that despite not desiring it, there are still people who dislike me. You. Us. Everyone. And this fear of being disliked, or the drive to be liked, can lead us to make horrific compromises on our values and to hold back from bringing the best of our uniqueness to the world.
However Hard You Try...
Some people react to the fear of being disliked by shying away from life. They don't want to draw attention to themselves so they hide for fear of being judged by others. While other people go the other way. They try to earn the affections of others by sharing anecdotes about their amazing lives, name dropping, and showing off their talents.
The truth is, neither of these options actually achieves the goal of being liked. They more likely lead to the opposite and accomplish the thing that the person feared in the first place.
There is only one option: to act courageously in the right way, deep in the knowledge that we will be disliked. To accept that, and to even be mindful of it. "I will be disliked whatever I do, so I might as well be me and create the world that I believe in in the process".
It's not a case of acting IN ORDER to be disliked. It's acting DESPITE being disliked. Being liked or disliked isn’t the driving force…your deeper values and principles are.
Preferred Indifferents
This is a Stoic concept. You might prefer things to be a certain way, but ultimately whether or not that occurs is outside of your control. One doesn’t want to be disliked, but you don’t mind if you are (because you have no control over it).
In Stoicism this applies to other things:
"I don’t want to be poor, but I don’t mind if I am" (because things outside of my control might happen to make it so). "I don’t want to be alone, but I don’t mind if I am".
The pursuit of being liked, being wealthy, and being in a relationship, can lead to a life of compromised values and integrity.
Switch from Attachment to Self (how others see me) - to Concern for Others (how I see others)
We can get confused between self-affirmation and self-acceptance. On the one hand, self-acceptance is acknowledging your 'incapable self as is' when you can't do something. You then move on to do whatever you can, and ask, "what can I do to get closer next time?" Self-affirmation, on the other hand, is entitlement. It's the voice that says "I failed this time but I was unlucky, I should have succeeded but was hindered".
"One cannot change what one is born with. But one can, under one’s power, go about changing what use one makes of that equipment. So, in that case, one has to simply focus on what one can change, rather than on what one cannot. This is what I call self-acceptance."
Enjoy Not Being at the Centre of the World
You are not at the centre of the universe. When interacting with people use this knowledge to move from 'what will others give me’ and ‘what do people owe me’, to the question, ‘what can I give them?’
This shift in perspective, takes power away from fear.