marshall wrote:
I mean I can tell myself to believe something but as long as I'm in the cognitive act of telling myself to believe something it's impossible to make the jump to actually believing what I want myself to believe because I'm too aware of the voice that's telling me to believe and I see the conflict of interest between what I want to believe and what is reality.
Also, if you lie to yourself you have to somehow be unaware that you are lying to yourself because if you were aware of the untruthfulness you were telling yourself you wouldn’t have succeeded in lying to yourself. Yet how is it possible to lie and be unaware that you are lying?
Self-delusion is... well... interesting. I've never been able to completely shut off that voice that tells me what's really happening either. But I've been able to attempt to act completely contrary to that voice. I used to torment myself because I'd heard that life is what you believe, so I thought that if I believed things then they'd happen, and that the problem was that I wasn't trying hard enough to believe them. But I never could because they weren't real (and would never have come true in a million years even if I did believe them).
I think most of the time "lying to oneself" means believing something false, that you could know was false if you thought it through, but deliberately not thinking it through too hard.
_________________
"In my world it's a place of patterns and feel. In my world it's a haven for what is real. It's my world, nobody can steal it, but people like me, we live in the shadows." -Donna Williams