Athena Save Us!
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2024
Just as the title says, has the idea of self-care gone too far? Is it breeding narcissists?
Every day, I get retarded news articles recommended to me about things that absolutely shouldn't be worth publishing, but they are because everyone needs a soapbox to stand on. These articles cover everything from articles about how some mom's parents want to bring their dog over with them for Christmas, but she hates the dog, and her kid is afraid of animals, so she has to stand her ground and disconnect from her toxic folks to stories about dads trying to figure out how to tell their kids they never wanted to have them in the first place, to how to tell the hurting friends in your life that you no longer have the emotional bandwidth to deal with any problems other than your own, which aren't that bad to begin with.
Then there's a relative of mine who has a troon son. As part of her self-help care routine, she'd embraced all of her spoony goodness, which involves not caring that she's become a land whale whom doctors are fearful for, to having her fibromyalgia, some weird condition that affects her sensitivity, to decided that she no longer likes bright colors and therefore can't decorate for Christmas, throwing out the gifts she'd gotten from her in-laws because she no longer feels obliged to pretend to like them for her husband's sake, and now tossing out scrapbook pages and journal entries that 'misgender' her troon son.
And these people seem to be all over. Under the umbrella of self-care, we seem to be becoming more self-centered as a society, despite everyone's protests that self-care is essential.
Yeah, self-care is great. It means bothering to exercise; thinking about whether or not someone your younger self can look up to, and whether or not you're turning into the person you want your future self to be. It's about taking the time to touch grass; lose yourself in a video game, movie, or book; and make sure you aren't becoming an insufferable work-a-holic who neglects both yourself and everyone else in your life.
But that's not what this new, Internet-fueled brand of self-care is. Like so many modern niches, it has its own weird vocabulary (pretty sure the phrase "personal truth" - which I hate with a passion - is common in this subculture) and quirks, and most of them are enabling people to be as selfish as possible in the name of avoiding unnecessary burdens and stress.
Is it just me? Am I crazy, or do you kiwis see this trend, too?
Every day, I get retarded news articles recommended to me about things that absolutely shouldn't be worth publishing, but they are because everyone needs a soapbox to stand on. These articles cover everything from articles about how some mom's parents want to bring their dog over with them for Christmas, but she hates the dog, and her kid is afraid of animals, so she has to stand her ground and disconnect from her toxic folks to stories about dads trying to figure out how to tell their kids they never wanted to have them in the first place, to how to tell the hurting friends in your life that you no longer have the emotional bandwidth to deal with any problems other than your own, which aren't that bad to begin with.
Then there's a relative of mine who has a troon son. As part of her self-help care routine, she'd embraced all of her spoony goodness, which involves not caring that she's become a land whale whom doctors are fearful for, to having her fibromyalgia, some weird condition that affects her sensitivity, to decided that she no longer likes bright colors and therefore can't decorate for Christmas, throwing out the gifts she'd gotten from her in-laws because she no longer feels obliged to pretend to like them for her husband's sake, and now tossing out scrapbook pages and journal entries that 'misgender' her troon son.
And these people seem to be all over. Under the umbrella of self-care, we seem to be becoming more self-centered as a society, despite everyone's protests that self-care is essential.
Yeah, self-care is great. It means bothering to exercise; thinking about whether or not someone your younger self can look up to, and whether or not you're turning into the person you want your future self to be. It's about taking the time to touch grass; lose yourself in a video game, movie, or book; and make sure you aren't becoming an insufferable work-a-holic who neglects both yourself and everyone else in your life.
But that's not what this new, Internet-fueled brand of self-care is. Like so many modern niches, it has its own weird vocabulary (pretty sure the phrase "personal truth" - which I hate with a passion - is common in this subculture) and quirks, and most of them are enabling people to be as selfish as possible in the name of avoiding unnecessary burdens and stress.
Is it just me? Am I crazy, or do you kiwis see this trend, too?