▲ | vidarh 21 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
No, I am not. Complaining does not require unhappiness at all. That there are lots of things I'd like to be better does not mean I'm not happy. That I enjoy complaining does not make me unhappy either - on the contrary, it makes me happier. > You can maybe lie to yourself that you are happy This is inherently paradoxical and hence nonsensical. If you successfully convince yourself that you are happy, you are happy. > Although Norwegians and Danes are generally happier than Finns and Swedes. That you think you know better than people themselves whether they are happy is just rude and insulting. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | carlosjobim 21 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
You are the person focusing on complaining specifically. I stated that the Nordics are far from being the happiest people in the world, and that is not by counting how much people complain. > This is inherently paradoxical and hence nonsensical. If you successfully convince yourself that you are happy, you are happy. If people are visibly unhappy but tell you that they are very happy, that doesn't mean that they've become happy by convincing themselves. That's like a guy screaming and punching you while he's saying that he's very calm. It's not reality, it's delusion. When somebody successfully convinces themselves to be happy, they don't continue their lives showing all the behaviour and attitudes of an unhappy person. You can also outwardly tell that they are happy. > That you think you know better than people themselves whether they are happy is just rude and insulting. Oh, the insolence! | |||||||||||||||||
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