An afternoon with the girls

I spent this afternoon with the girls making our favorite Purple Yam (or is it purple sweet potatoes?) steam buns. While at it, we went into a deep conversation about schools.

It is clearly a challenge for both girls, but particularly for Ratih as a high schooler. She has to be at school by 6.30am, which means she has to wake up at 5.25ish. The lesson normally finishes at 3pm and so she will arrive back home at 4ish. Then, she needs to do her homework – and there are lots of them. She sometimes finishes very late into the night. By the time she goes to bed, she is exhausted.

There is also an issue about different subjects that she must take, about friends and teachers, and of course about grades. She has always been a serious student and she always strives to get good grades – which I think most students do. But, as it happens, the reality does not always meet her expectations.

I tried to recall my own experience when she tells this. I think I went through the same phase, but I did not feel it to be so bad. So, instead of dismissing her challenge, I tried to figure out how to help her.

I did not always have this same view. I used to take it really hard when she struggles. I feel for her and I think that I must solve her problems – which in the end is not always possible until recently when I read the book “The Courage to be Disliked” by Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga.

In one of the chapters, the authors mentioned parents’ duties toward their children. Sometimes, parents unknowingly, force their desire on their children – for example, by forcing them to study, setting them to go to a certain study program, telling them to take a certain profession, and many more.

The authors are against this view. They said that parents should not force their children to study because it is not their task. They introduced the concept of “Separation of Task” which means that the task belongs to the person who will benefit from the task. We should not intrude on other people’s tasks, even if the person is our children or family. Studying is the child’s task since they will benefit from it. Forcing a child to study is intruding on the child’s task and is often caused by the parent’s own desire not to be embarrassed by their grades. They continue to say that as a parent, our task is to assist our children to do their tasks and build a trusting relationship.

When I read this, I was really taken aback. So far, I never have had serious problems with both girls. They always take their study seriously, although I may not always agree with their approach. But, I do worry that they are not happy with the process and results.

Taking the perspective of Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga, worrying would not help either. I should focus on my task to provide full support and assistance to both my girls in navigating their school years. I hope I will do a good job on this. With this in mind, my load is a little less.

“From here on this is not my task” — discard other people’s tasks and lighten your load.

The Courage to be Disliked – Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga

Lessons from “The Courage to Be Disliked”

As part of my new habit, I tried to read and write more – not papers or work-related reading. After reading The AtomicHabits, I bought this book based on a Twitter recommendation. I thought the title was really provocative 😊 I don’t think many people will admit to having the courage to be disliked!

I immediately got hooked the moment I started reading. Its a fairly easy to read. The way the book narrates a debate between a philosopher and a young man who thought that he could not be happy is intriguing to me.

The book is inspired by Afred Adler, who is against Simon Freud’s thinking. I heard about both but never really read about their works. So it truly is something new to learn about Freud’s teleology vs. Adler’s Ateology.

People are not driven by past causes, but move toward goals that they themselves set

Page 21

This way of thinking reminds me of Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations (which I have not finished reading), who urged us to live in the now without being burdened by the past or the future.

Then the book introduces many thought-provoking ideas. Some that I can recall are…

All problems that people experience are interperpersonal relationship problems

page 52

Minderwertigkeitsgefuhl, which means a feeling (Gefuhl) of having less (minder) worth (Wert). So, ‘feeling of inferiority’ os a ter, that has to do with one’s value judgment of oneself

page 54

What I should do is face my own tasks in my own life without lying

page 131

Community feeling: Self-acceptance, confidence in others and contribution to others.

Happiness is the feeling of contribution. “I am of use to someone”

I have the ability and consciousness that people are my comrade

page 225

I am glad I read this book 💜

But I will leave it with these

  1. Life is simple
  2. People can change and be happy from this moment onward
  3. The problem is not one of ability, but of courage.

“The courage to be happy also includes the courage to be disliked. When you have gained that courage, your interpersonal relationships will all at once change into things of lightness.”