24
.
Just as the adolescent bargains with other people, she bargains with future (or past) selves in a
similar manner. This idea that our future and past selves are independent individuals separate from our
present-moment perceptions is put forth by Derek Parfit in
Reasons and Persons, pp. 199–244.
25
.
Remember, we derive our self-esteem from how well we live up to our values (or how well we
reinforce the narratives of our identity). An adult develops values based on abstract principles (virtues)
and will derive his self-esteem from how well he adheres to those principles.
26
.
We all require a “Goldilocks” amount of pain to mature and develop.
Too much pain traumatizes
us—our Feeling Brain becomes unrealistically fearful of the world, preventing any further growth or
experience. Too little pain, and we become entitled narcissists, falsely believing the world can (and
should!) revolve around our desires. But if we get the pain just right, then we learn that (a) our current
values are failing us, and (b) we have the power and ability to transcend those values and create newer,
higher-level, more-encompassing values. We learn that it’s better to have compassion for everyone
rather
than just our friends, that it’s better to be honest in all situations rather than simply the situations
that help us, and that it’s better to maintain humility, even when we’re confident in our own rightness.
27
.
In
chapter 3
, we learned that abuse and trauma generate low self-esteem, narcissism, and a self-
loathing identity. These inhibit our ability to develop higher-level, abstract values because the pain of
failure is constant and too intense—the child must spend all her time and energy escaping it. Growth
requires engaging the pain, as we’ll see in
chapter 7
.
28
.
See J. Haidt and G. Lukianoff,
The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and
Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation for Failure (New York: Penguin Press, 2018), pp. 150–65.
29
.
See F. Fukuyama,
Trust: The Social Virtues and the Creation of Prosperity (New York: Free Press
Books, 1995), pp. 43–48.
30
.
A great example of this phenomenon was the Pickup Artist (PUA) community in the mid-2000s, a
group of socially isolated, maladapted males who congregated to study social behaviors in order to be
liked by women. The movement didn’t last for more than a few years because, ultimately, these were
childish and/or adolescent men who
desired adult relationships, and no amount of studying of or
practice in social behaviors can produce a nontransactional, unconditional loving relationship with a
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