Self-justification is that reaction-driven "thinking" you naturally engage - meaning you do so without any conscious, mindful awareness of doing it - to reconcile those conflicted and disturbing thoughts and feelings (a.k.a cognitive dissonance).
- One likes to smoke (and does) but is made painfully aware of the health risks (especially by others)...and yet finds a way to justify or excuse their indulgence (i.e., lighting up and smoking), or
- One wants to buy something they really aren't sure they can afford but - in the moment - does; and then finds all the "good and right" reasons for doing so...or
- One loses at a game "they should have won," but didn't because...or
- One has been unfairly criticized and becomes defensive, finding all the reasons the criticism is wrong or undeserved...or
- One has been fairly criticized - and becomes defensive...or
- Or, or...
...that hidden (i.e., we're just not aware of) yet intractable influence of
BIAS.
Well, you are...
...but then, hey, we all are biased - it's not "a choice" we have. But it doesn't mean - as it did in being subjected to our childhood conditioning - that we can't mitigate, or transcend, or "self-emancipate" ourselves from such an arguably limiting psychological "infection." (See above in our "very own Svengali"...)
There is an antidote - it's called psychological flexibility...
...that is, objectively and without bias; that the facts are plain for all to see; that rational people (like you and me) will agree with us; and that those who don't must be somehow uninformed, biased, or irrational.
But (and here's the kicker) we don't see reality as it really is!
The reality is, naive realism is itself a delusion; i.e., we don't see the world objectively. We instead really see it subjectively - and this means (only) through a filtering lens of emotional influence (a.k.a. bias). The facts may indeed be "plain to see" but "the seeing" is skewed - i.e., limited, altered, distorted - by feelings and that prior knowledge we have been "educated" and conditioned to see.
1) they so often "just don't get us," and
2) why we (as well) "don't get them."
One antidote to this dysfunctional tendency we all have of engaging - unwittingly - in naive realism...might just be developing our own capabilities and skills in:
- empathy (comprehending what that other person believes, feels, and has experienced)
- humility (being mindful that one can be [actually is] imperfect, fallible, and limited); and
- open-mindedness ("While I may know a lot, I sure as hell don't know it all - maybe there's something to learn here?").
...reading words makes you think.
And when you think - as opposed to just react - you are more likely to find benefit in living your life. This is not something readily acknowledged or understood so...if you're curious enough to discover why, go here...
...oh, at such a cost!
Denial is that unconscious mental process (i.e., our Rider is not aware of our engaging in such) of "choosing to believe" - i.e., wanting or needing or "having to" - something other than what the reality is. This results of course in not getting the reality right - and when you don't get the reality right bad consequences are likely to follow...
How to avoid - or engage far less in - denial? Click here.
More coming...
...like denial, at such a cost!
Denial, by the way, is actually just a form of delusion; a subset, if you will, of how we engage (in) delusion.
How to avoid - or engage far less in - delusion? Click here.
More coming...
...stay tuned (i.e., come back again later; there may be more).