luc said:obyvatel said:I think one of the features of the so-called STS type feeding is the desire to recreate pleasurable experiences. If we have some positive, uplifting experience without expecting it or trying to make it happen, it is natural and spontaneous. If we subsequently try to recreate such experiences deliberately, we end up using and feeding of others. Altruism can thus become a mask for the desire to feel good oneself through helping others. It can be subtle and not easily discernible.
Instead of second guessing ourselves about our potential "hidden" motivations and possibly angsting about whether we are feeding or not, a practical way of living is to be present to the situation at hand with as much attention we can muster, and respond as best we can. Situations are dynamic and unique especially if we pay close attention and if we make the additional effort to relate appropriately to the changing situation, there is not much internal resource available to deliberately execute on a desire (hidden or overt) to recreate an old experience. That does not guarantee we do not feed in a STS way - but I think this is pretty much what is in our control.
I think this is very sound, practical advice. I noticed that I tend to "recreate past experiences" (feeding) when I'm not aware, not self-remembering - especially in social situations that trigger old patterns, which I could not root out yet - these are usually those situations where I'm less experienced in terms of self-remembering. In other situations that I know well and have practiced self-remembering many times, I find that I can switch a bit more to "auto-pilot" without causing harm/feeding, or so I think. So yes, I think mustering our attention, remembering the Work and how easily we slip, seems important to avoid feeding.
A good rule of thump for me is to do what "it" doesn't like, as much as possible. So for example in a social situation I try to sense what "it" urges me to do and do the opposite - if I want to talk a lot and be funny, I try to hold myself and just listen; if I want to wander away/be silent, I try to talk and be funny; etc. I think a lot of feeding can be avoided that way, though of course it only goes so far.
By self-remembering in the situation/environment at hand, I find myself in those specific moments questioning my potential hidden motivations. Is there a possibility of becoming obsessed with trying not to feed, that it causes a negative effect? I.e. it just becomes another way of fooling yourself that you're trying to "work" but really you're only addressing the problem rather than sorting through it?
I tend to use "remember" as thinking; 1) What I'm feeling is probably irrational and the machine at work, 2) What is the reality in the situation and what does this look like without my interpretation.. .etc... As you said luc, doing what "it" doesn't like in terms of not talking when you feel the need to does help. In social situations, I tend to feel the need to talk about myself, but since working on stopping this all together, it just shown how much others talk about theirselves SO much, and aren't interested in you at all. I'll purposely ask questions about themselves over and over again, and it becomes quite interesting to see how much they don't "ask back".
It's a constant struggle, and maybe one day this does turn into an automatic response...
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