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  • Most people can never, even for a moment, disentangle themselves from the restraints

  • imposed by those around them, nor can they disregard their approval.

  • From the moment they begin to understand their parents' smiles and frowns they have needed

  • the moment to moment approval of everyone, even strangersThese people measure their

  • entire worth by what others think of them.”

  • Richard Taylor, Restoring Pride Most of us care too much about what other

  • people think of us.

  • We value social approval too highly and we possess an irrational fear of disapproval,

  • criticism, and rejection.

  • Instead of forging a path through life that aligns with our talents, strengths and desires,

  • we conform to the wants and expectations of others.

  • Some of us even let our dreams die because we fear how we will be judged if we pursue

  • them.

  • In this video, we are going to explore how we can diminish an excessive need for social

  • approval and overcome the life-inhibiting fear of social disapproval.

  • “I have never wished to satisfy the crowd; for what I know, they do not approve, and

  • what they approve, I do not know.”

  • Epicurus, Quoted in Seneca, Epistles A useful first step to cultivating a healthier

  • attitude to the opinions of others is to reflect on the character of the individuals whose

  • approval we seek.

  • Are such individuals deserving of our respect and admiration?

  • Are they flourishing or stagnating?

  • Do they possess courageous, independent, and inquisitive minds capable of seeking the truth

  • and forming and voicing their own opinions?

  • Or are they cowardly conformists who uncritically accept and regurgitate whatever it is they

  • are told by the mainstream news, celebrities, social media personalities, and politicians?

  • If an individual does not impress us, why should we care if our way of life impresses

  • them?

  • Why do you take pleasure in praise from those you cannot praise yourself?”

  • Seneca, Epistles Or as Arthur Schopenhauer echoed:

  • What goes on in other people's consciousness is, as such, a matter of indifference to us;

  • and in time we get really indifferent to it, when we come to see how superficial and futile

  • are most people's thoughts, how narrow their ideas, how mean their sentiments, how perverse

  • their opinions, and how much of error there is in most of them.”

  • Arthur Schopenhauer, The Wisdom of Life Conditioning ourselves to be indifferent to

  • the approval of a single individual is one thing.

  • However, when in the presence of a group, or crowd of people, the need for approval

  • can be especially strong, and sometimes this need manifests as a social anxiety that cripples

  • our capacity to flourish.

  • When giving a speech or performance, we grow tense and jittery and unable to perform to

  • the best of our ability.

  • At social gatherings we are awkwardly self-conscious and unable to act with natural spontaneity.

  • And worst of all, the social anxiety that lies behind an excessive need for the approval

  • of groups inhibits us from following our conscience; even when we know what we are saying or doing

  • is wrong, we sheepishly follow the crowd.

  • According to the stoic philosopher Epictetus, to tame this social anxiety we should reflect

  • on the nature of a crowd.

  • For as Epictetus stated regarding the individual who is socially anxious:

  • “…he doesn't know what a crowd is, or the applause of a crowdwhat the praise

  • of the mass of people is, and what value it holds in life, these are things that he neither

  • knows nor has ever studied.

  • So here he is bound to tremble and turn pale.”

  • Epictetus, Discourses, Fragments, Handbook Most people relate to a crowd as if it were

  • an entity in its own right, and so naturally they grow intimidated by its presence.

  • However, in reality a crowd is nothing more than a collection of individuals gathered

  • in one location or else united by a common sentiment.

  • When in the presence of a crowd if we train ourselves to see and relate to single individuals,

  • rather than to the crowd as a whole, it is much easier to diminish an anxious need for

  • approval.

  • For just as we should be indifferent to the approval of a single individual who we do

  • not respect, the same applies to a collection of individuals who happen to be congregated

  • together.

  • Or as the Roman philosopher and statesman Cicero wrote:

  • What could be more absurd than to suppose the same ignorant and common people you despise,

  • when taken one by one, are of any greater consequence when taken together?”

  • Cicero, Tusculan Disputations In some cases, however, a group or crowd is

  • composed of individuals with impressive minds and admirable characters.

  • Yet even in such a situation, what such individuals think of us is not in our control, and so

  • it should not be our concern.

  • All we can do is carry ourselves with integrity and try to refrain from doing anything that

  • is deserving of disdain, and then gracefully accept whatever opinions they form of us.

  • Or as Epictetus stated:

  • No good man grieves or groans, no one wails, no one turns pale and trembles and says, “How

  • will he receive me, how will he listen to me?”

  • Slave, he will act as he sees fit.

  • Why do you care about other people's business?”

  • Epictetus, Discourses Along with tempering our need for social approval,

  • overcoming the fear of disapproval, ridicule, and rejection is also life-promoting.

  • We need to be able to maintain a state of calm indifference when attacked by the stings

  • of other people's scornbe it online or in the real world.

  • Epictetus advised that when we are the target of another's contempt, the first thing we

  • should do is pause and allow ourselves to take a breath before we react, as immediate

  • or reflexive reactions are often self-defeating.

  • If we take a moment to compose ourselves, we will be free to choose a response that

  • is appropriate to the situation.

  • Human freedom involves our capacity to pause between the stimulus and response and,

  • in that pause, to choose the one response toward which we wish to throw our weight.”

  • Rollo May, The Courage to Create Or as Epictetus observed:

  • Remember that you are insulted not by the person who strikes or abuses you but by your

  • opinion that these things are insulting.

  • So whenever another provokes youtry above allnot to allow yourself to be carried

  • away by the impression; for if you delay things and gain time to think, you'll find it easier

  • to gain control of yourself.”

  • Epictetus, Enchiridion One of the more powerful ways to respond to

  • insults or ridicule is tolisten like a stone”.

  • This involves reacting to the person as a stone would react.

  • In other words, it is to not react at all.

  • We let their words fall on deaf ears, go about our business, and pretend the other person

  • does not exist.

  • This response is effective for two reasons.

  • Firstly, when someone insults or ridicules us, one of the things they want is to provoke

  • a reaction.

  • They want to feel their words have power over us.

  • In listening like a stone, we refrain from satisfying their will to power and show them,

  • by doing nothing, that their provocations are petty and not able to move us.

  • Secondly, as our thoughts and emotions are influenced by our actions, in reacting like

  • a stone we become stone-like internally:

  • It is the mark of a great mind to rise above insults; the most humiliating kind of

  • revenge is to treat your adversary as not worth taking revenge uponThe great and

  • noble are those who, like a lordly beast, listen unmoved to the barking of little dogs.”

  • Seneca, On Anger Or as Epictetus explained:

  • What does it meanto be abused?

  • Go up to a stone and subject it to abuse; what effect will you produce?

  • Well then, if you listen like a stone, what will anyone who abuses you be able to achieve?”

  • Epictetus, Discourses Another strategy is to respond to contempt

  • with humor.

  • Humor diffuses the tension of the situation; it shows the other person we are not going

  • to lower ourselves to their level and respond to their vileness in kind, nor feed the flames

  • of their anger.

  • An especially witty remark can even turn an enemy into a friend.

  • But perhaps most importantly, humor breeds poweras it is the mark of the powerful

  • to be amused by those who are mistreating them.

  • Or as Seneca observed:

  • Some are offended if a hairdresser jostles them; they see an insult in the surliness

  • of a doorkeeper, the arrogance of an attendant, the haughtiness of a valet.

  • What laughter such things should draw!

  • With what satisfaction should your mind be filled when you contrast your own peace of

  • mind with the unrest into which others blunder!”

  • Seneca, On the Constancy of the Wise Man The philosopher Diogenes was a master at the

  • art of using humor to sweeten his dealings with disagreeable people.

  • When insulted by a bald man Diogenes responded: “I'll not insult you in return, but simply

  • congratulate your hair for having taken flight from such an evil head.”

  • Another time someone informed him that a fellow philosopher was speaking badly of him, and

  • so Diogenes replied: 'That's nothing to wonder at, since he's never learned to speak

  • well.”

  • When heckled by a group of men, Diogenes yelled backCome over here, men!”

  • As they approached, Diogenes casually dismissed them by saying “I called for men, not scum!”

  • Occasionally, however, the humor we use should be directed at ourselves.

  • For sometimes insults contain kernels of truth.

  • Rather than showing offence to insults that hit the mark, we are far better off recognizing

  • that, like everyone else, we have flaws, quirks, foibles, and blind spots that can and should

  • be the object of humor.

  • If we stop taking ourselves so seriously and develop a healthy humility, then we can laugh

  • with the person who is laughing at us, and thus ruin his or her attempts to disturb us.

  • The French philosopher Montaigne wrote that a worthy goal isto be equally laughable

  • and able to laugh” (Montaigne, Essyas).

  • Seneca observed that: “No one is laughable who can laugh at himself.”

  • (Seneca, On the Firmness of the Wise Man) While Epictetus stated:

  • If you hear that someone has spoken ill of you, do not make excuses about what was

  • said, but answer: “Evidently he didn't know about my other faults, or he wouldn't

  • have spoken only of the ones he did.”

  • Epictetus, Enchiridion

  • Ultimately, however, the greatest antidote to caring too much about what people think

  • of us, is to cultivate confidence in ourselves.

  • If we are insecure and plagued by feelings of inferiority, we will be slavishly dependent

  • on the approval of other people, and forever fearful of their scorn.

  • If, on the other hand, we focus our time and energy on strengthening mind and body, improving

  • our character, achieving our goals, and sculpting a life to be proud of, then what others think

  • of usbe it good or badwill dwindle into the realm of insignificance.

  • Or as Epictetus stated:

  • If you are ever tempted to look for outside approval, realize that you have compromised

  • your integrity.

  • If you need a witness, be your own.”

  • (Enchiridion)

  • Epictetus, Enchiridion

Most people can never, even for a moment, disentangle themselves from the restraints

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