The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can't Stand Positive Thinking

The Antidote: Happiness for People Who Can't Stand Positive Thinking

Oliver Burkeman

⭐⭐⭐

  • Lifestyle
  • Philosophy

Another one by Oliver, to consider if I like Meditations for Mortals.

Nice, a bit muted in its main points. It is an exploration, Project Happiness-style, of what happiness is and how to feel happier, pushing a strong countertrend: motivational seminars often have the opposite effect because they make you anxious about feeling happy. Memento mori, instead, has you think about the hard parts of life and its limits, which helps you enjoy it fully. I liked his meditative trips to explore the worlds of seminar culture, monks, philosophers, and the view of the dead in a poor neighborhood in Mexico. An OK book; I would not reread it. It is also very similar to 10% Happier in parts.

Notes

I did not make it a regular habit to humiliate myself on public transport systems in major cities. Nor did I relocate to rural Mexico, to live a life infused with death. So far, I haven’t even been on another silent meditation retreat since my week in Massachusetts. But in numerous smaller ways, a modest degree of negative capability has become my daily practice. Few days now go by without some occasion on which I’ll deploy what I have come to think of as the “Stoic pause” - which is all that it takes to remember that it’s my judgment about the infuriating colleague, or the heavy traffic, or the burned food, that is the cause of my distress, not the situation itself.