Self Improvement > 10 Ways to Lose Your Common Sense
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Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Susan Dunn
As someone said, there's nothing common about common sense. Roughly
equivalent to Emotional Intelligence, it can be lost, or can fail to be
acquired in the following ways:
1. Lose the common touch.
Have more money than common sense (or taste). Use your money to buy your
way out of problems and to avoid those nasty mutual obligations and
responsibilities that come with real relationships. Quit asking your
friends over to help you paint your house - pay a painter. Quit going over
there to help them paint theirs - just send a check. You can do that for
war relief, poverty, homelessness and anything else that "bothers" you!
(P.S. Don't take your friends out on your boat, either; there are possible
liabilities involved.)
2. Don't get your hands dirty.
Children, dogs, your lawn or garden, real cooking and baking, your house,
even your spouse ... it can all get pretty messy. No need to "touch" things
you don't need to. Get in your ivory tower and stay there. Deal with it
idealistically and theoretically. Read about it. Assign it to others.
Don't test your thoughts and feelings against new realities.
3. Use your power to isolate yourself.
Intimidate others so they no longer speak the truth to you or around you.
Consensual validation is part of reality-testing. Lose the "consensus" and
you lose reality. If you work it right, you can arrange to hear only what
you want to hear and already believe to be true.
4. Establish artificial connections; it's much safer.
Pay a 3rd party (like a collusionary therapist or social worker) to listen
to you talk about your work and relationship problems instead of talking
with the real people involved and yanking and pulling in the warp and woof
of actual living. Paint it all through your eyes only. Clergy, doctors and
coaches could also be used. Just be sure you don't make any changes or take
any action. Contemplation is one thing. Taking action involves risk,
involves changing. Whoa!
5. Ignore physiological symptoms and signals.
Just because you've had chronic diarrhea since you started that job doesn't
mean it has anything to do with that job. (Stay in your left brain,
please!! There's no "proof".) If it meant your job was making you sick,
well, that would mean you're a wuss, so avoid connecting up with your
feelings. Remain strong! Appearances count, you know.
6. Apply Prozac liberally.
Why experience those negative emotions that are so disturbing? Medicate
them! Options include, but are not limited to: prescription drugs, illegal
drugs, nutriceuticals, alcohol, a cult, and obsessive exercising, gambling,
or shopping.
7. Quit thinking for yourself.
Advice is plentiful; just ask someone else what to do. Why struggle? Pay
them for their opinion if necessary, but avoid the hard work and
introspection of developing your own wisdom. For extra credit, keep
"thinking" and "feeling" totally separate. Compartmentalize everything you
can. Bonus points: If something goes wrong, you can blame someone else!
8. Take no risks.
If you take a risk you might fall flat on your face. It's much safer to
maintain the status quo. Just remember Number 5.
9. Stick with what you know.
Stay where you are. Make sure everyone you interact with feels and thinks
the same way you do about things. You've already made up your mind, so why
confuse yourself with new data, or, worse, stirring feelings? Don't rock
the boat.
10. Starve your brain
Avoid new playmates and new toys. Why learn something outside your field
when you're 40, 50, 60? Accept that you can't teach old dogs new tricks.
©Susan Dunn, MA, EQ coaching, http://www.susandunn.cc, mailto:sdunn@susandunn.cc. Individual coaching, business programs, EQ Alive! #1 rated program to increase your EQ – simple, no memorizing, it works. Email for information, and free ezine.
Permission to reprint if byline stays intact and its links are activated on the internet. Courtesy copy appreciated. You may change the title if you like and make minor formatting changes to accommodate your publication.
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