Letters to my kids: A suicide survivor's lessons and advice for life
Letters to my kids: A suicide survivor's lessons and advice for life
Letters to my kids: A 2-time suicide survivor and advocate for realistic optimism.
Episode 22 - Envy : Challenging contentment by comparison
13 minutes Posted May 10, 2018 at 5:02 am.
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Envy - Challenging contentment by comparison

Music: “Just A Blip” by Andy G. Cohen

From the Free Music Archive
Released under a Creative Commons Attribution International License

Am I really falling behind? Is anybody actually keeping score? Did any of these people post any

of the updates with the intent of making me feel bad? Of course not.

A feeling of discontented or resentful longing aroused by someone else's possessions, qualities,

or luck.

"Envy is the art of counting another's blessings instead of your own" - Harold Coffin

Envy is a secretly held emotion.

If you are envious of someone it's unlikely that you will admit it to anyone, except perhaps to

someone who might also be envious of that other person and will participate with you in
denigrating them. 

Talk about growing up and friends buying handphone.

"Do not overrate what you have received nor envy others. He who envies others does not obtain

peace of mind" - Gautama Buddha

Envy has to do with feeling unhappy about the success of someone else, or about what they have

and, at the same time, secretly feeling inferior yourself. If you are envious of someone you may
want to put them down, as though this will raise you up or lower everyone else's opinion of them.

Envy has many manifestations. For example, it is possible to mistake attraction to another person
for what is actually your envy of them. The hostility that you might experience with envy of a
competitor is missing in this instance because the expectation is that you will get the envied
attribute by association. 

How do we respond when we encounter people who are more successful than we are? Often, we imagine

two paths: admiration and envy. Admiration is seen as a noble sentiment—we admire people for
admiring others, detecting, in their admiration, a suggestion of taste and humility.

"Envy is a gun with a faulty breech-lock which flares back and burns the gunner" - Austin

O'Malley

Don’t compare your insides to someone else’s outsides.

You have no idea what it took for them to get there. Don’t act like this was unearned,

effortless, or pure dumb luck.
Because it’s much easier to look at someone “up there” and envy what they’ve got than it is to
ask the tougher questions:

When we reflect on these questions, we shift immediately out of comparison mode and turn inwards,

to face the heart of the matter: our own desires and fears.

Talk about envy about other families that had "stable" and great family relationships with

parents.

Transform comparison into celebration

Admiration and envy are responses that point us toward what we value most. And when we become

aware of what we value, we are much better positioned to create a life that’s richly satisfying.

"Envy comes from people's ignorance of, or lack of belief in, their own gifts" - Jean Vanier