Monthly Archives: January 2019

今天和周小琪一家吃午饭为他们践行,看到她和宇衡和他们家的小Eva。心下十分感慨。尤其是自己会感觉到宇衡的一些变化,在和人相处之间的点点变化。
心中感慨蛮多的。我觉得自己应该也被周琪感染了许多。也在有很好地去接纳和学习了。回到办公室看到了被推送的一篇文字:

6 Toxic Relationship Habits Most People Think Are Normal
总结得很好啊。感觉能在其中看到过往的种种,有些在我自己身上有,有些在对方身上有。
想想看,从第一次来美国至今,即将满十年。十年自己的变化,的确是十分巨大的。这不限于感情生活,也包括学业和自我成长,包括和原生家庭父母的关系,包括很多方方面面。
总的来说,自己是很清醒的样子,也在成长着。

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/6-toxic-relationship-habits-most-people-think-are-normal

There’s no class in high school on how to not be a shitty boyfriend or girlfriend. Sure, they teach us the biology of sex, the legality of marriage, and maybe we read a few obscure love stories from the 19th century on how not to be.

But when it comes down to actually handling the nitty-gritty of relationships, we’re given no pointers… or worse, we’re given advice columns in women’s magazines.

Yes, it’s trial-and-error from the get-go. And if you’re like most people, it’s been mostly error.

But part of the problem is that many unhealthy relationship habits are baked into our culture. We worship romantic love — you know, that dizzying and irrational romantic love that somehow finds breaking china plates on the wall in a fit of tears somewhat endearing — and scoff at practicality or unconventional sexualities. Men and women are raised to objectify each other and to objectify their relationships. Thus, our partners are often seen as assets rather than someone to share mutual emotional support.

A lot of the self-help literature out there isn’t helpful either (no, men and women are not from different planets, you over-generalizing prick). And for most of us, mom and dad surely weren’t the best examples either.

Fortunately, there’s been a lot of psychological research into healthy and happy relationships the past few decades and there are some general principles that keep popping up consistently that most people are unaware of or don’t follow. In fact, some of these principles actually go against what is traditionally considered “romantic” or normal in a relationship.

Below are six of the most common tendencies in relationships that many couples think are healthy and normal, but are actually toxic and destroying everything you hold dear. Get the tissues ready.

1. The Relationship Scorecard

What It Is: The “keeping score” phenomenon is when someone you’re dating continues to blame you for past mistakes you made in the relationship. If both people in the relationship do this it devolves into what I call “the relationship scorecard,” where it becomes a battle to see who has screwed up the most over the months or years, and therefore who owes the other one more.

You were an asshole at Cynthia’s 28th birthday party back in 2010 and it has proceeded to ruin your life ever since. Why? Because there’s not a week that goes by that you’re not reminded of it. But that’s OK, because that time you caught her sending flirtatious text messages to her co-worker immediately removes her right to get jealous, so it’s kind of even, right?

Wrong.

Why It’s Toxic: The relationship scorecard develops over time because one or both people in a relationship use past wrongdoings in order to try and justify current righteousness. This is a double-whammy of suckage. Not only are you deflecting the current issue itself, but you’re ginning up guilt and bitterness from the past to manipulate your partner into feeling wrong in the present.

If this goes on long enough, both partners eventually spend most of their energy trying to prove that they’re less culpable than the other, rather than solving the current problem. People spend all of their time trying to be less wrong for each other instead of being more right for each other.

What You Should Do Instead: Deal with issues individually unless they are legitimately connected. If someone habitually cheats, then that’s obviously a recurring problem. But the fact that she embarrassed you in 2010 and that now she got sad and ignored you today have nothing to do with each other, so don’t bring it up.

You must recognize that by choosing to be with your significant other, you are choosing to be with all of their prior actions and behaviors. If you don’t accept those, then ultimately, you are not accepting them. If something bothered you that much a year ago, you should have dealt with it a year ago.

2. Dropping “Hints” and Other Passive-Aggression

What It Is: Instead of stating a desire or thought overtly, your partner tries to nudge you in the right direction of figuring it out yourself. Instead of saying what’s actually upsetting you, you find small and petty ways to piss your partner off so you’ll then feel justified in complaining to them.

Why It’s Toxic: Because it shows that you two are not comfortable communicating openly and clearly with one another. A person has no reason to be passive-aggressive if they feel safe expressing any anger or insecurity within the relationship. A person will never feel a need to drop “hints” if they feel like they won’t be judged or criticized for it.

What You Should Do Instead: State your feelings and desires openly. And make it clear that the other person is not necessarily responsible or obligated to them but that you’d love to have their support. If they love you, they’ll almost always be able to give it.

3. Holding the Relationship Hostage

What It Is: When one person has a simple criticism or complaint and blackmails the other person by threatening the commitment of the relationship as a whole. For instance, if someone feels like you’ve been cold to them, instead of saying, “I feel like you’re being cold sometimes,” they will say, “I can’t date someone who is cold to me all of the time.”

Why It’s Toxic: It’s emotional blackmail and it creates tons of unnecessary drama. Every minor hiccup in the flow of the relationship results in a perceived commitment crisis. It’s crucial for both people in a relationship to know that negative thoughts and feelings can be communicated safely to one another without it threatening the relationship itself. Otherwise, people will suppress their true thoughts and feelings which leads to an environment of distrust and manipulation.

What You Should Do Instead: It’s fine to get upset at your partner or to not like something about them. That’s called being a normal human being. But understand that committing to a person and always liking a person are not the same thing. One can be committed to someone and not like everything about them. One can be eternally devoted to someone yet actually be annoyed or angered by their partner at times. On the contrary, two partners who are capable of communicating feedback and criticism towards one another, only without judgment or blackmail, will strengthen their commitment to one another in the long-run.

4. Blaming Your Partner For Your Own Emotions

What It Is: Let’s say you’re having a crappy day and your partner isn’t exactly being super sympathetic or supportive at the moment. They’ve been on the phone all day with some people from work. They got distracted when you hugged them. You want to lay around at home together and just watch a movie tonight, but they have plans to go out and see their friends.

So you lash out at them for being so insensitive and callous toward you. You’ve been having a shitty day and they have done nothing about it. Sure, you never asked, but they should just know to make you feel better. They should have gotten off the phone and ditched their plans based on your lousy emotional state.

Why It’s Toxic: Blaming our partners for our emotions is a subtle form of selfishness and a classic example of the poor maintenance of personal boundaries. When you set a precedent that your partner is responsible for how you feel at all times (and vice-versa), you will develop codependent tendencies. Suddenly, they’re not allowed to plan activities without checking with you first. All activities at home — even the mundane ones like reading books or watching TV — must be negotiated and compromised. When someone begins to get upset, all personal desires go out the window because it is now your responsibility to make one another feel better.

The biggest problem of developing these codependent tendencies is that they breed resentment. Sure, if my girlfriend gets mad at me once in a while because she’s had a shitty day and is frustrated and needs attention, that’s understandable. But if it becomes an expectation that my life revolves around her emotional well-being at all times, then I’m soon going to become very bitter and even manipulative towards her feelings and desires.

What You Should Do Instead: Take responsibility for your own emotions and expect your partner to be responsible for theirs. There’s a subtle yet important difference between being supportive of your partner and being obligated to your partner. Any sacrifices should be made as an autonomous choice and not seen as an expectation. As soon as both people in a relationship become culpable for each other’s moods and downswings, it gives them both incentives to hide their true feelings and manipulate one another.

5. Displays of “Loving” Jealousy

What It Is: Getting pissed off when your partner talks, touches, calls, texts, hangs out, or sneezes in the general vicinity of another person and then you proceed to take that anger out on your partner and attempt to control their behavior. This often leads to insano behaviors such as hacking into your partner’s email account, looking through their text messages while they’re in the shower or even following them around town and showing up unannounced when they’re not expecting you.

Why It’s Toxic: It surprises me that some people describe this as some sort of display of affection. They figure that if their partner wasn’t jealous, then that would somehow mean that they weren’t loved by them.

This is absolutely clownshit crazy to me. It’s controlling and manipulative. It creates unnecessary drama and fighting. It transmits a message of a lack of trust in the other person. And to be honest, it’s demeaning. If my girlfriend cannot trust me to be around other attractive women by myself, then it implies that she believes that I’m either a) a liar, or b) incapable of controlling my impulses. In either case, that’s a woman I do not want to be dating.

What You Should Do Instead: Trust your partner. It’s a radical idea, I know. Some jealousy is natural. But excessive jealousy and controlling behaviors towards your partner are signs of your own feelings of unworthiness and you should learn to deal with them and not force them onto those close to you. Because otherwise, you are only going to eventually push that person away.

6. Buying the Solutions to Relationship Problems

What It Is: Any time a major conflict or issue comes up in the relationship, instead of solving it, one covers it up with the excitement and good feelings that come with buying something nice or going on a trip somewhere.

My parents were experts at this one. And it got them real far: a big fat divorce and 15 years of hardly speaking to each other since. They have both since independently told me that this was the primary problem in their marriage: continuously covering up their real issues with superficial pleasures.

Why It’s Toxic: Not only does it brush the real problem under the rug (where it will always re-emerge and even worse the next time), but it sets an unhealthy precedent within the relationship. This is not a gender-specific problem, but I will use the traditional gendered situation as an example. Let’s imagine that whenever a woman gets angry at her boyfriend/husband, the man “solves” the issue by buying the woman something nice, or taking her to a nice restaurant or something. Not only does this give the woman unconscious incentive to find more reasons to be upset with the man, but it also gives the man absolutely no incentive to actually be accountable for the problems in the relationship. So what do you end up with? A checked-out husband who feels like an ATM, and an incessantly bitter woman who feels unheard.

What You Should Do Instead: Actually, you know, deal with the problem. Trust was broken? Talk about what it will take to rebuild it. Someone feels ignored or unappreciated? Talk about ways to restore those feelings of appreciation. Communicate!

There’s nothing wrong with doing nice things for a significant other after a fight to show solidarity and to reaffirm commitment. But one should never use gifts or fancy things to replace dealing with the underlying emotional issues. Gifts and trips are called luxuries for a reason, you only get to appreciate them when everything else is already good. If you use them to cover up your problems, then you will find yourself with a much bigger problem down the line.

——–Mark Manson is the author of The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life.

新年伊始,被生活踩在脚下了

现在就是这样的感觉。觉得,新一年一开始,自己的生活就陷入了困境中。但是细细看来,却都是自己造成的。感觉就是,老天爷给了我一副好牌,但是我自己却打得异常糟糕。

平日里,虽然很少打扑克,但是若真的打起来,其实我也的确真的牌技太烂了。

心里难受得很呀。不知道需要几天才能恢复。在这里写东西,也越发觉得无力了。

Hofstadter 和 Chomsky

在桌上看到了很久之前在Strand Bookstore和人搭话时,被推荐的Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid。一直都没有仔细去了解过,直至昨晚在书桌前看到,随手查了一下,才发现是一本巨作。
写了一大堆话,感慨二老,最终删光。踏踏实实读书才是真。

2018-2019的跨年总结?

新年的第一篇文字,自然是要有一系列的寄语。看到朋友圈里大大小小的人儿们说这这样那样的期望,其实蛮好奇自己会说些什么。在飞机上醒过来时,发现刚刚好错过茶点,也不大好意思再回过头去和小姐姐们要些东西。于是开始想着如何规整后面的生活。啊,啊,可以把剩下的4集野兽刷完。今晚就做这事儿吧。想到这里就有点儿开心,因为可以连续看三个半小时的片子。啊,啊,在blog里写点什么东西吧。但是按照航班的时间,到达村子大约得7点半了吧。洗漱完直接看剧,然后也得在12点前睡下。写blog得到什么时间开始写?那么就明儿早上吧如何,带着一张星巴克卡,隆重地去迎接自己即将加入(已经半加入)的downtown星巴克老爷爷俱乐部(也就才认识Robert和John而已),以及即将迎接Robert的那本历史方面的书。那时候再开始写blog吧……等等,为什么不现在开始写呢?一看手表,发现5点二十多,似乎还有一些时间,至少有一个小时的时间吧。这可以让自己敲一段时间的字儿。

你看,我每每写字,都要找点儿什么东西先絮叨一番,仿佛是做菜前磨刀,跑步前热身,喝开水前用茶杯盖子拨拉一下茶叶,还要在郑重其事地吹那么一吹(入老年人俱乐部实在是恰如其分)。于是,我这篇用来记录2018年最后一个多月的故事,需要用这么长的文字来做一整个开场白。又或者可以说,用1月1日这么有仪式感的一天,还用在达美航空的飞机上这么商务化的环境里,在DL3731这趟航班的11D位置,小桌板上放着一大瓶1.00L的水,然后在这里狂敲字儿。

作为豆瓣的虔诚用户,我从来没有奢望过自己可以在豆瓣上获得一份感情。而我也没想到过,这样一条relation小船的来去匆匆。Ship虽然开走了,未来是否还会有交集又尚未知晓,但是小船的到访对于港湾,已经留下了很不一样的故事。说起来,古往今来,各种港湾发展成为一个又一个都市,你看上海,你看纽约,你看开普敦,你看伦敦,而同时也很可能成为敌人攻击的目标。如果有那么一艘美好的小船儿,给人带来的是生活的希望和许多自己曾所未知的美好,我是真心觉得自己实在是幸运且被上天眷顾到了的孩子

网络对我来说,始终是太深邃了,这或许堪比大海。但是人心叵测,那一大堆人,简直就是宇宙。尤其在听完小钟和我描述过关于暗网的知识后,对网络的警惕心始终贯穿于我的生活。譬如,朋友们你们或许会发现我的笔记本电脑上的摄像头始终是被一张纸条封上的。而胆敢在网络上发表自己现实生活的信息,表达一定诉求的人,我大约都分为两类(但这一定是不公允,或是不敬的。对那些人儿们的歉意随之一道附上):一类是很傻很天真,一类是很真很虔诚。而另外一方面,我对文字及语言的热爱,让我很乐于在阅读中去了解写作者的心理。但正因为如此,我在看到了小韶同学寥寥几句的文字和大大方方的配图后,居然很慎重地审视了一下自己的心情,然后去尝试联系认识了。

不同的作家,会有着属于自己特别明显地独特行文风格。而另一方面,不一样的生活素材,也会让人不由自主地想要用单属于之的独特方式来记述描绘。不知道为什么,因为和小韶同学(她本人很讨厌这样的称谓,又或者,其实她很讨厌各种未经过其个人认证前提下而擅自设定的任何情节)的交流可以比较深入,所以我总是会想到阿兰德波顿,一种半意识流的方式来绵延铺设各种,这压根儿就不是形散而神不散,而是一种让思维语言随遇而安的一种涌动,或者说,让思维试着去随波逐流,好像是kayak的漂流一般。但说实话,其实我还想到了陈忠实,或是马尔克斯。用一种剧透的上帝视角来阐述这过往发生的一切种种。但现实生活就是啪啪啪的打脸声,之所以用了“啪啪啪”而不是“啪啪”,是因为打脸的节奏实在是很华尔兹,居然可以有预知地被现实各种打脸,而且如此和谐且有节拍。自以为看过很多电影的我,发现生活给我写的剧本,简直就是神作。但是我也毫无心力和胆量敢说自己的经历可以戏剧化。比如可以写成《沙莫的五百天》的另一个版本或是《失恋三十三天》的镜面故事。我的生活似乎更像是,脑中的成像是,在锻造一把器具的过程中,锻造师划破了手指,让血液浸到了钢水中。但这明显又不是干将莫邪的故事。你又可以说,我在胡说八道些什么,又可以说,其实是有些个不知道地表在哪里了。整个人如同一只大鲸鱼在水底吐出的泡泡,飘悠悠地向着水面浮过去。

能够触发我的这种思维方式,或是说,是我自己一直都很热衷的“阿兰德波顿流”,身边的人实在是很少。你如果有机会走到大晴天的纽约,在红绿灯拦下所有车辆时,路过某条avenue,站在中间往那一段看不着边际的大道中,惊叹那一瞬间的美好,却又要赶紧在人行灯亮完前走到对面。又或是有机会在大都会博物馆门口的石阶上坐着,看着来来去去的游客,以及匆匆的路人。又或是每天早晨6点至7点,太阳刚刚升起的时候,无论今天天气如何,你都会看到从地球的切线处挤进来的一道橙红色阳光,真的是无论天气如何,你都会看到那一抹阳光。在小韶 同学的眼睛里,黑洞洞的瞳仁,白得微微有些泛蓝的眼底,柔柔的双睑轻轻托着晨光般的眼睫,这些景色你就都看得到。但是我们并没有去过那些地方,也没有能够在日出的时间看那阳光。只是我自己怎样都能从中看到些什么。

2019年,未来自己是否会切入不一样的生活,自己也尚且不得而知。好比当初从本科到美国,从村里到nyc,从美国再回上海,再去南京,又回美国。身边的人在换,但是自己到底终究是在和什么样的人在一起生活呢?你看我说了这么多,但是终究其实是不知道自己在说些什么。又或者,我其实说了这么多,压根儿就没有在说任何表面上的故事,又或者,其实我已经说了很多很多了。这明显就是一篇对读者极其不友好的文字,仅仅为了记录自己的生活,为了倾吐心中超出预期的多宇宙融合。更像是蜘蛛侠世界的多重版本。那可真是一出好电影啊。

我想把种种思绪,藏在一大堆乱七八糟的文字里面,目的就是为了让人看不出来,我到底在说些什么想些什么:)心无挂碍,无有恐怖,远离颠倒梦想,究竟涅槃:)2019年,生活,你好:)