Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 6402 answers
Clear values eliminate entire categories of decisions — you simply choose what aligns.
Clear values eliminate entire categories of decisions — you simply choose what aligns.
Clear values eliminate entire categories of decisions — you simply choose what aligns.
Often the hardest value decisions are between two good things not between good and bad.
Living according to your values when it is costly is the deepest expression of character.
Clear values remove confusion and provide direction for every significant choice.
You cannot prevent all suffering but you can choose how to relate to it.
Suffering that serves a purpose is fundamentally different from pointless suffering.
Those who have a why can bear almost any how — meaning provides endurance.
Difficult experiences can produce growth that would not have occurred without them.
Framing suffering as a necessary part of a growth story reduces its destructive power.
Pain points to something important — use it as data about what needs attention.
The desire to end suffering for yourself or others can be a powerful motivator.
Shared suffering creates bonds that shared joy cannot.
Having known real difficulty changes your perspective in ways that comfort cannot.
Not fleeing from pain but staying present with it builds emotional strength.
In the midst of pain even small moments of meaning can sustain you.
Retrospective meaning-making allows you to integrate past suffering into your story.
Using your experience of suffering to help others find meaning in theirs.
Not all suffering yields to meaning-making — some pain simply must be endured.
The attempt to avoid all suffering often creates more suffering than it prevents.
When suffering is ongoing finding meaning becomes an ongoing practice.
Being present to others suffering without fixing it is a form of meaning-making.
Communities that process suffering together create shared meaning and resilience.