I am sometimes a complete fool. I initiate theological and political discussions when I haven't the time to see them through whatsoever. I squander a day I should be putting to good university use on watching the Bathurst 1000, though eye fatigue is kicking me in the arse anyway. My apologies; I'll get back to things eventually
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I'll have to disagree with you on that one, André. You're implying that emotions are pointless and that they do not matter in the greater scheme of things; I would argue the exact opposite. Without emotions, we would not enjoy anything, we would not feel outraged over anything, we would not love anything, we would not hate anything, and we essentially would have little reason to do the things that we do. Life is not merely an intellectual excercise -- it is a multifaceted thing ( ... )
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I don't know. Emotions don't exactly fill academic libraries. And it seems any decisions made based on emotions just end up being all kinds of flimsy and prone to problems. I can't trust emotions like I can trust some fairly detached intellectualism. Shame I can't stop feeling them anyway.
'we would not love anything, we would not hate anything'This sounds like a good thing to me, heh. Well, wait, I suppose my love of Kiwi history is something I kind of need. Damn ( ... )
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Do have a look through your library's English literature section at some point. ;) Or the psychology section, for that matter. Some of the world's greatest academic minds have written extensively on the value of emotion and, particularly, the value of expressing that emotion.
I understand where you're coming from, though. When you're in a funk, it's often much easier to distance yourself from negative feelings than it is to confront them or deal with them in an effective way. Like you said, though, the only problem with doing that is that it doesn't always work.
Now, this is going to sound ridiculous, but hear me out.
Buy a small exercise trampoline. If you find yourself ruminating over negative things, stop thinking, immediately procede to the trampoline, and jump about for five minutes or so - just long enough to get the endorphins flowing. You might feel like a bit of a twit while you're doing it, but trust me, it can help. People always underestimate the value of exercise. It is ( ... )
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You want me to run screaming from the library once I stumble upon the literary criticism, or worse still, an actual literary critic? Well, I suppose it is an emotional response! ;) (By the way, I wonder if you've seen this xkcd comic before? I'm going to print it out and cellotape it to my lounge door right below this Dinosaur Comics gem.)
But in all seriousness, touche. I am quite sure I could mount a strong historiographical argument about emotion in my own discipline too. I just don't particularly want to at this very moment. I'd rather believe that I could be quite happy if I just picked up all of my sources, trudged off to some quiet, undisturbed place, and could read and write without any transient, fickle emotions around to bug me.
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As I was saying ...
'When you're in a funk, it's often much easier to distance yourself from negative feelings than it is to confront them or deal with them in an effective way. Like you said, though, the only problem with doing that is that it doesn't always work.'
I suppose I should learn from the past. When I was about 17, I lived a very distant and disconnected, apathetic existence, and it bred problems of its own - sure, it avoided serious emotional lows, but it also had no real high points, and mundanity itself like that isn't the best thing on earth. But then when I stepped away from that, I found myself getting increasingly hurt, so ... now I don't know which is really the better option.
'People always underestimate the value of exercise. It is the one coping mechanism that is almost guaranteed to make a difference, simply because it affects your brain chemistry in a positive way. If you combine physical activity with your ( ... )
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