You can care about distant suffering while celebrating your friend's birthday.
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You can care about distant suffering while celebrating your friend's birthday.
The joy in your life isn't tainted by coexisting with suffering elsewhere.
The ethical move is acknowledging reality, while being selective about what you engage with.
Choose where you can make a difference with time, money, or action.
You are not a passive receptor for everyone's pain.
Compartmentalization isn't a moral failing. It's a necessity that lets you remain functional for the people who depend on you.
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You can care about distant suffering while celebrating your friend's birthday.
The joy in your life isn't tainted by coexisting with suffering elsewhere.
The ethical move is acknowledging reality, while being selective about what you engage with.
Choose where you can make a difference with time, money, or action.
You are not a passive receptor for everyone's pain.
Compartmentalization isn't a moral failing. It's a necessity that lets you remain functional for the people who depend on you.
@pseudonym agree. This post has energised me this morning.
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You can care about distant suffering while celebrating your friend's birthday.
The joy in your life isn't tainted by coexisting with suffering elsewhere.
The ethical move is acknowledging reality, while being selective about what you engage with.
Choose where you can make a difference with time, money, or action.
You are not a passive receptor for everyone's pain.
Compartmentalization isn't a moral failing. It's a necessity that lets you remain functional for the people who depend on you.
as an active receptor for others’ pain you’re spot on
i spend fair amount of my day disengaged so i can bleed off some of that pain i take in.
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You can care about distant suffering while celebrating your friend's birthday.
The joy in your life isn't tainted by coexisting with suffering elsewhere.
The ethical move is acknowledging reality, while being selective about what you engage with.
Choose where you can make a difference with time, money, or action.
You are not a passive receptor for everyone's pain.
Compartmentalization isn't a moral failing. It's a necessity that lets you remain functional for the people who depend on you.
@pseudonym Thank you for sharing this, these are wise and encouraging words!
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@pseudonym agree. This post has energised me this morning.
Thank you for the kind words.
Partly a reminder for myself, really.
Happy to hear it had value and resonated.
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