Sunday, August 9, 2020
Your Own Advice Is the Hardest Pill to Swallow
Your Own Advice Is the Hardest Pill to Swallow Giving advice is pretty easy: Anyone can give advice. Anyone can make recommendations. Anyone can tell you what to do. Just because someone spouts their opinion, though, doesnât mean itâs the correct advice for you. Itâs often easy to take advice from other people when they are dishing it out. Having relationship trouble? We typically ask a friend for advice. Having a conflict with a co-worker? We ask another co-worker for advice. Having money problems? You get the idea. Sometimes, all we have to do is look in the mirror and ask ourselves for advice. Who knows you better than you? Nobody is more aware of your situation. Nobody is more familiar with every scenario and potential outcome. So why do we turn to others so often? Because itâs easy. If someone tells us what to do, we donât have to think. Coincidentally (or not-so-coincidentally), this is also how fascism works: someone else makes the decisions for you. Or sometimes we ask other people for advice to reaffirm our ownâ"but other people rarely have the same stake in the outcome, which makes their opinion less valid than our own. Itâs okay to ask others for adviceâ"sometimes itâs great to have a fresh pair of eyesâ"but remember: it is you who must live with your decisions. Read this essay and 150 others in our new book, Essential.
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