Articol Cu Aforisme Rebt
Articol Cu Aforisme Rebt
Articol Cu Aforisme Rebt
LANGUAGE
This key turning in the lock experience with aphorisms has happened
to me on two occasions, and they have influenced the quality of my life.
One occurred with, All we need to be truly happy is something to be
enthusiastic about (Charles Kingsley 18191875). Suddenly I understood
myself better and had a tether, if not a handle, on happiness. This, of
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course, has common elements with, To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive (R L Stevenson
18501894). But it was the Kingsley rather than the
Stevenson aphorism that pressed my buttons. Thus, a
particular statement will work for a particular individual at a particular time. I will report my second
key turning in the lock experience with aphorisms
in a subsequent paragraph.
The second way that an aphorism may be helpful to
people is when it slightly misses the spot, but hits
close enough to lead one to some valuable ideas. At
the least a near-miss aphorism will stimulate interest
and a potential avenue for subsequent growth. This
might follow from, An epigram is a half-truth so
stated as to irritate the person who believes the other
half (Shailer Mathews 18631941).
Thus, not everyone values this type of statement.
But fear not, support has been recorded: It is a good
thing for an uneducated man to read books of
quotations (Winston Churchill 18741965) and In
the heart of every aphorism, no matter how new or
indeed paradoxical its demeanour, there beats an
ancient truth (Arthur Schnitzler 18621931).
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tains that the way the individual feels is a consequence of the way that the individual thinks. Ellis
maintained that lives could be improved by the use
of logical thought processes. Of interest here is that
he developed this therapy from the philosophies of
Heraclitus, Democritus, Epicurus and Epictetus, and
others. While some aphorisms are produced by philosophers (e.g. Epicurus), others are produced by
individuals with no philosophical training who are
simply making observations, usually about life and
human nature.
But even Albert Ellis had been upstaged: Your mind
will be like its distant thoughts; for the soul becomes
dyed with the colour of its thoughts (Marcus Aurelius
AD 121180) and The mind grows by what it feeds
on (J G Holland 18191881).
A distinction should also be drawn between discussing aphorisms with people and conducting logotherapy (therapy through meaning) as described by
Victor Frankl.2 Aphorisms, in general, do not offer
meaning as much as insights into human nature,
which can be applied to the self and others. Aphorisms do, however, tend to share with logotherapy
the proposals that individuals have freedom of will,
must make choices, and are responsible for their
choices.
Aphorisms are sometimes summarily rejected because
they smack of the paternalism and the preaching of
the past. There is a risk of throwing out the wisdom
with the bath water. I have attempted to protect such
sensitivities by steering clear of all religious treaties
and references and keeping work is good for you
statements to a minimum.
METHOD
Tens of thousands of aphorisms of potential interest
were examined.316 Sixty-six aphorisms of interest
were recorded and grouped using a subjective version
of the graphical notion of best fit.
RESULTS
Cure
People presenting to psychiatrists are usually in great
distress. Most are looking for a cure but psychiatric
disorders, by and large, are chronic disorders. The
statement that what cannot be cured must be
endured can be useful. Some people presenting to
psychiatrists are the casualties not of psychiatric
illness but of ignorance and the vicissitudes of life, in
which case cure is an inappropriate concept.
1. What cant be cured must be endured (English
proverb).
2. It is with diseases of the mind as with those of the
body; we are half dead before we understand our
expects
nothing
Expectation of happiness
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are concerned with competition than with cooperation but this may reflect a paranoid selection bias.
1. The world must judge you by what you seem, not
by what you are (Earl of Chesterfield 16941773).
2. We judge other people by what they say and do,
ourselves by what we think and intend (Comtesse
Diane 18291899).
3. We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of
doing, while others judge us by what we have
already done (Henry Longfellow 18071882).
4. The usual fortune of complaint is to excite
contempt more than pity (Jonathan Swift
16771745).
5. There are people who can never forgive a beggar
for their not having given him anything (Karl
Kraus 18741936).
6. Everything is funny as long as its happening to
someone else (Will Rogers 18791935).
7. We grow tired of everything but turning others
into ridicule, and congratulating ourselves on
their defects (William Hazlitt 17781830).
8. The absent are always in the wrong (Philippe
Destouches 16801754).
9. I know what I have given you. I do not know what
you have received (Antonio Porchia 18861968).
10. It is not enough to succeed. Others must fail
(Gore Vidal b.1925).
11. Whenever a friend succeeds, a little something in
me dies (Gore Vidal b.1925).
12. Failure is not our only punishment for laziness:
there is also the success of others (Jules Renard
18641910).
Work and responsibility
In general, those who have provided aphorisms have
been high achievers, and have probably worked hard
for their success. Perhaps not surprisingly, then, there
is a crop of aphorisms that extol the virtue of work
and responsibility. As promised, space will not be
squandered on gratuitous paternalism. It is interesting that Voltaire considered that work was the solution to a range of problems.
1. Each man is the architect of his own fate (Appius
Caecus, 4th century BC).
2. A failure establishes only this, that our determination to succeed was not strong enough (Christian
Bovee 18201904).
3. God gives every bird its food, but he doesnt throw
it into the nest (J B Holland 18191881).
4. Work banishes those three great evils, boredom,
vice, and poverty (Voltaire 16941778).
DISCUSSION
Aphorisms are created by clever people. They can
be brought into clinical discussions and have the
advantage of being the opinion of a non-psychiatrist.
Sometimes they can render a new insight or conclusion; at other times they may have less immediate
effect but lead to a new train of thought.
Selected aphorisms have been arranged here under
headings, for ease of handling of disparate information. Others may well choose a different and superior
system of classification.
We do not have access to the future, and because it
takes time to process information, we have limited
access to aphorisms of the present era. Thus, inevitably, the present paper is weighted (biased) to the past.
So what? Some of these aphorisms reveal that some of
the questions people are addressing today have been
addressed, often with some success, for millennia.
No claim was made that solutions would be provided.
The objective was to provide aphorisms that may be
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interesting and useful. The last was chosen deliberately: The golden rule is that there are no golden
rules (George Bernard Shaw 18561950).
7. Anon. Oxford Dictionary of Quotations, 3rd edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press
1985.
8. Green J, ed. A Cynics Lexicon. London: Sphere Books, 1986.
9. Anon. Bloomsbury Dictionary of Quotations. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 1987.
REFERENCES
1. Ellis A, Harper R. A New Guide to Rational Living. Hollywood: Wilshire, 1979.
2. Frankl V. Mans Search for Meaning. New York: Pocket Books, 1985.
10. Crawley T, ed. The Wordsworth Book of Film Quotations. Hertfordshire: Wordsworth
Editions, 1991.
11. Rees N, ed. Chambers Dictionary of Modern Quotations. Edinburgh: Chambers, 1993.
12. MacHale D, ed. Wit. London: Prion, 1996.
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6. Beck E, ed. Familiar Quotations John Bartlett, 15th edn. Boston: Little, Brown, 1980.
16. Cohen M ed. The Penguin Dictionary of Epigrams. London: Penguin Books, 2001.