hotblack
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Mine was by reading your postHas my well-being improved? Nope.

Mine was by reading your postHas my well-being improved? Nope.
Literally all this does is cheapen the meaning of awe. It's like turning it into a product, commoditized, sold in bits and pieces for mindless consumption. Take it out of the freezer, microwave, then chomp on it without ever tasting the rubbery food imitation.Awe intervention
The intervention component consisted of teaching participants a simple three-step process of how to find awe in the ordinary: by paying attention to the environment in daily life, slowing down, and expanding on those awe moments. Participants were given the following instructions:
How to access moments of AWE in the ordinary
Attention: full and undivided attention on things you appreciate, value, or find amazing.
Wait: slow down, pause.
Exhale + Expand: amplify whatever sensations you are experiencing.
Participants were asked to practice finding awe at least three times a day. They were also reminded that finding awe does not require extraordinary events and can be practiced in brief moments throughout the day—less than 30 seconds, three times a day.
Yes, the trick with all these therapies is to rebrand frequently, so the complaints about the previous brand don't stick.Obviously this is just regular mindfulness with a different hat, which clearly is somewhere the field will have to turn to now that all the false promises of mindfulness have turned out to be just as much bunk as "power posing"
Attention: full and undivided attention on things you appreciate, value, or find amazing.
Wait: slow down, pause.
Exhale + Expand: amplify whatever sensations you are experiencing.
Is that not the system we live in? To turn everything into a product, into a profit, into power, into control.Literally all this does is cheapen the meaning of awe. It's like turning it into a product, commoditized, sold in bits and pieces for mindless consumption. Take it out of the freezer, microwave, then chomp on it without ever tasting the rubbery food imitation.
The exact opposite of what awe is about. It's like the problem with superpowers: if everyone is super, no one is. If someone tries to force "awe" 3 times per day, then nothing is.
Obviously this is just regular mindfulness with a different hat, which clearly is somewhere the field will have to turn to now that all the false promises of mindfulness have turned out to be just as much bunk as "power posing", The Secret and other superstitious nonsense.
Is that not the system we live in? To turn everything into a product, into a profit, into power, into control.
I think we sit on the forefront of that given how the state-academia-clinical medicine has treated us, (without forgetting the insurance and wellness industry influence in this as well).
It’s like we sit in an intersection of so many overlapping forms of power and control. Some with the goal to profit, some to erase, but they have a similar end goal from our perspective.
Oo thats so cool. I kinda wish I had taken more philosophy courses in uni. Back when I could read abstract jargon and make sense of it without crashing.Very well put. As someone who studied a lot about systems of control, capitalism etc etc, it was bizarre to find that I had still managed to be completely hoodwinked by said system, and then sort of be strapped into a front row seat to observe and be a victim of the emptiness and cruelty of the system we live in.