Rule

Persona3Reload@lemmy.blahaj.zone to 196@lemmy.blahaj.zone – 187 points –
13

A wise man is one who silences not his cringe, but the part of him who cringes

How? Nobody offers prefrontal lobotomies anymore...

No. You do not remove the cringe, but embrace the cringe. Become one with the cringe and you will transcend it.

Real talk, it's just desensitization through exposure.

Cringing is self-harm, in that no actual damage would have happened except for the ways in which an individual punishes oneself. The punishment, itself, is non-productive and a waste of both personal energy and time as well as emotional capacity.

One cannot learn from punishing oneself. One must learn to reapproach the calculus of benefit and harm from first principles and soberly, mindfully understand what actually matters, without preoccupation for the petty and superficial distractions.

Look... Shame is a tool. It exists to give us a sense of where we stand in terms of compliance or violation with regard to the Social Contract. Societies too steeped in luxury and too abstracted from/no longer concerned with visceral needs will tend to hallucinate new bullshit hoops for people to jump through, for the sake of stimulus alone. Creating aesthetic taboos is little more than superfluous stimming for the sake of feeling SOMETHING where there is otherwise a lack of conflict because our ancestors evolved to confront a world that challenged them. It's practically masturbatory. SHED. THESE. ARTIFICIAL. CHAINS. You will no longer struggle with them if you can finally come to understand that their arbitrary restraint performs no actual viable purpose beyond creating pointless hardship. You do not OWE society a convoluted navigation through its shallow and performative obstacle course if you can actually, instead, comprehend for YOURSELF what the limits of benefit and harm really are. It's like we're expected to navigate a maze blindfolded by smell because "it's tradition" but if you take off the blindfold you'll see that the maze's walls and pitfalls are not aligned 1:1 with the proverbial "scent trail".

Punishment and shame should only be applied to discourage ACTUAL HARMS, not transgressions against the delicate sensibilities of the paranoid loud minority of trendsetters and gatekeepers. If you know yourself and the CONCRETE consequences of your actions, the bleating of the pearl-clutching hand-wringing false idols of stolen authority can no longer contain or threaten you.

I feel like cringe culture fucked up a lot of young people and still makes some overly jumpy in critical discussion.

It also tends to empower bigotry more than other types of comedy. Cringe communities consistently became nazi shitholes more than anywhere else.

My hot take is cringing is good actually. You should move on from the dumb shit you did in the past and recognising that is dumb is very different from not being ashamed of it.

except that this isn't about the emotion of cringe but about cringe culture, the general notion that it's a-ok to make fun of individuals and/or subgroups for behavior that makes you cringe.
maybe you're too old or too young or just lucky enough to have missed it but there was a time where unironic "cringe compilations" were a thing. people got harrased, doxed, and genuinely harmed because of it.

a lot of the stuff people cringe about is fine and does not need changing. beating yourself up a little to grow past your flaws and mistakes might be good, but they gotta be actual flaws and mistakes

I had to look up sparkledogs and now I feel really old.

i'm simply going to believe that captainsparklez has a dog and that's how the dog is referred to.

if the glasses of the kitty (quite fittingly) on the right were any more rose tinted she'd have glowing red eyes like when a robot turns evil