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The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness
The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness
The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness
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The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness

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An international bestseller and TikTok sensation with more than 10 million copies sold worldwide, The Courage to Be Disliked is a transformative and practical guide to personal happiness and self-fulfillment.

Now you can unlock your full potential and free yourself from the shackles of past traumas and societal expectations to find true personal happiness. Based on the theories of renowned psychologist Alfred Adler, this book guides you through the principles of self-forgiveness, self-care, and mind decluttering in a straightforward, easy-to-digest style that’s accessible to all.

The Courage to Be Disliked unfolds as a dialogue between a philosopher and a young man, who, over the course of five enriching conversations, realizes that each of us is in control of our life’s direction, independent of past burdens and expectations of others.

Wise, empowering, and profoundly liberating, this book is a life-changing experience that shows you a path to lasting happiness and how to finally be the person you truly want to be. Millions are already benefiting from its teachings—and you can be next.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherAtria Books
Release dateMay 8, 2018
ISBN9781501197291
The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness
Author

Ichiro Kishimi

Ichiro Kishimi was born in Kyoto, where he currently resides. He writes and lectures on Adlerian psychology and provides counseling for youths in psychiatric clinics as a certified counselor and consultant for the Japanese Society of Adlerian Psychology. He is the translator, into Japanese, of selected writings by Alfred Adler—The Science of Living and Problems of Neurosis—and he is the author of Introduction to Adlerian Psychology, in addition to numerous other books.

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Reviews for The Courage to Be Disliked

Rating: 4.221962605140187 out of 5 stars
4/5

428 ratings35 reviews

What our readers think

Readers find this title to be a mind-changing, clear, and practical book about life's most important questions. It introduces the concept of teleology and encourages taking responsibility for one's life. The book provides wonderful insights and is captivating and intriguing. While some readers find it incomplete without a Christian worldview, it still offers valuable perspectives. It has helped many readers gain a different perspective on life and psychology, leading to personal growth and positive changes. The book is recommended for anyone interested in self-development, psychology, or philosophy.

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    such interesting topics broken down to their essence but also with enough questions still left that you can take and implant into your own life
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Too simplistic. The dialogues are unnatural and in the audio book they are unbearable.
    The author lost me entirely with traumas don't exist. I think there's a difference between not letting your traumas define you and denying them entirely. House chores is another thing that caught my attention. I get the feeling, Adler never had to do chores he loathed.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book is a masterclass of fallacious arguments, but ultimately serves its purpose as a psychology text by presenting new ideas to challenge automatically accepted and established ones, urging readers to at least reflect on them.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I couldn't finish it because I'm not a fan of the presentation. The book is written as a conversation.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really resonate with this view of relationships, thank you so much!!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A must-read! Simply explains everything about life. Indeed, "life is a series of moments"
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book will anger you frustrate you and challenge you but if you let it it will help you.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    An eye opener. I warmly recommend it to anyone interested in self development/psychology/philosophy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amazing book,that truly changed an still changes my way of thinking and raised many existential questions. Thank you!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    New perspective on life and psychology for me. Recommended
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I lost my boyfriend 2 years ago I don't know what to do suddenly I meet Dr Hopson online I believe him in the first place but I have no choice as a soldier so l have to fight for it Dr Hopson told me will get him back and I trust him Dr Hopson help me get back my boyfriend now we are married thank you Dr Hopson May the God's bless you everything you lay your hands on May he be successful if you need Doctor can help you can message him on email ? [email protected] / WhatsApp 2349065052918
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    One of the most though provoking books I've ever read!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    One of the most, if not the most, enjoyable book I have ever read. Love the style of writing and the content gives you many things to reflect on

    3 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Easy to understand, somehow, since the ideas are so groundbreaking. This is definitely a must-read for anyone I know- it simply gives a coherent and beautifully simple worldview with which you can implement into your life.

    4 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I think this is a good book for young people to read to give them courage to be themselves.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I have had anxiety for years. After reading about Adlerian's Psychology, I started to look at life differently.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It is an interesting read, I had many takeaways from the book. It also introduced me to Alfred Adler's Individual Psychology. It was very easy to read because it was done in dialogues, you wouldn't want to put it down.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is life changing. I’m learning and growing so much from this book. It’s easy to read and I do so every so often so that I can actually apply the lessons to my waking life!

    2 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Written in a conversational style, this book serves as a good introduction to this style of philosophical thought. It left me with lots to think about and hungry for a deeper dive.

    8 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A mind changing, clear and practical book about life's most important questions. Thank you.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Excellent and timely introduction to the work of Adler.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book literally changed my life. I was in a very dark place when I discovered this book. It helped me take ownership of my life and stop blaming outside sources for the way I was. I’ve been sober for two years and this book helped me choose my path. I highly recommend it to everyone.

    3 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    For me , one of the best books I’ve read in a while. I relate a lot with Adler’s psychology and I’m surprised I didn’t know about him before. Vert well written book, easy to read and enjoyable.

    4 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A good read but it might require you to go over it a second time in order to grasp every concept.

    5 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is an interesting book and throws up many challenges to our way of thinking. It addresses our self-concepts and asks us to reassess the way we go about our lives.

    I am not familiar with Adlerian philosophy, so I must take the author's word and interpretation.

    He used the Platonic tool, of a dialogue, effectively.

    The book started well, but as it progressed, I felt that much of the material was tautological. This diminished the value I would have otherwise gotten from the book.

    3 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Captivating, intriguing, incomplete.

    Loved it. Yet as a Christian I recognize a world view without Christ our Creator is incomplete. In the end the philosopher confesses life is meaningless.

    Wonderful insights and at times perplexing. I recommend it!

    3 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book really helps gain a different perspective on how one interprets current life situations. Introduces the concept of teleology and encourages to take responsibility for where we are in life. It stresses that to gain steady happiness one must feel a sense of contribution by being and by actions. Great book loved it!

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    First, an admission: I bought this book as a joke, not seriously intending to read it. 'The Courage to be Disliked'? Crazy. But then I actually started reading it, and within pages I was hooked.

    Like almost everyone I can think of, I am familiar with the name Sigmund Freud, and of his impact on the world of psychiatry and psychology. His theory that all present problems can be traced back to a root cause is compelling and clearly understandable.

    But most importantly, it might very well be wrong.

    In this fascinating book, Kishimi introduces the reader to the work and philosophy of Freud's contemporary, Alfred Adler. He turned Freud's logic on its head, suggesting instead that we use our current state as an excuse not to change. For example, somebody who is depressed might say that they are depressed as a result of a failed marriage, or that they were never loved as children. But this way of looking at things will simply prevent positive change from happening: you cannot change the past, and therefore the future is already written for you. Adler instead said that a depressed person is using their depression as an excuse not to be depressed - or in other words, there are benefits to the depression that outweigh fighting against it.

    At first, this sounds quite ridiculous, not to mention downright insensitive. But as you probe the argument, you find that it is rather more sensible than it first seemed: a depressed person does not have to take risks, such as trying to go out and find somebody to date. If you try asking somebody out, you can easily be rejected, and that causes pain; but if you say you are too depressed to even attempt change, you are protected against the risk.

    The courage spoken of in the title of this book then is not so much that you go out of your way to be disliked, but that you come to an understanding of who's task it is to do the disliking. You cannot make people like you - you can only live in such a way that being liked or disliked matters little to you and your sense of self.

    This was the first time I read the name Adler; I doubt it will be the last. My curiosity has been piqued, and I want to know more, for here I seem to have found an approach to living my life that I can really get onboard with.

    12 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Written in the stilted "dialogue" meant to emulate Plato, long passages of this book felt interminable as the wise teacher batted aside straw men of ego, fame and honor. Still, the underlying idea that our freedom to be ourselves lies in our ability to seek our value through duty to others while also accepting that we can not work to please others is a compelling one for me.
    I'd say skip this short book unless they come out with an abridged version.

    2 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Dogmatic, outdated and disproved theories. Not recommended for anybody as I believe it will make more harm than good. And as cherry on top, it is a dreadful read with an unnatural dialogue without flow.

    5 people found this helpful

Book preview

The Courage to Be Disliked - Ichiro Kishimi

The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness, by Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga. More than 10 million copies sold worldwide.

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Contents

Authors’ Note

Introduction

THE FIRST NIGHT:

Deny Trauma

The Unknown Third Giant

Why People Can Change

Trauma Does Not Exist

People Fabricate Anger

How to Live Without Being Controlled by the Past

Socrates and Adler

Are You Okay Just As You Are?

Unhappiness Is Something You Choose for Yourself

People Always Choose Not to Change

Your Life Is Decided Here and Now

THE SECOND NIGHT:

All Problems Are Interpersonal Relationship Problems

Why You Dislike Yourself

All Problems Are Interpersonal Relationship Problems

Feelings of Inferiority Are Subjective Assumptions

An Inferiority Complex Is an Excuse

Braggarts Have Feelings of Inferiority

Life Is Not a Competition

You’re the Only One Worrying About Your Appearance

From Power Struggle to Revenge

Admitting Fault Is Not Defeat

Overcoming the Tasks That Face You in Life

Red String and Rigid Chains

Don’t Fall for the Life-Lie

From the Psychology of Possession to the Psychology of Practice

THE THIRD NIGHT:

Discard Other People’s Tasks

Deny the Desire for Recognition

Do Not Live to Satisfy the Expectations of Others

How to Separate Tasks

Discard Other People’s Tasks

How to Rid Yourself of Interpersonal Relationship Problems

Cut the Gordian Knot

Desire for Recognition Makes You Unfree

What Real Freedom Is

You Hold the Cards to Interpersonal Relationships

THE FOURTH NIGHT:

Where the Center of the World Is

Individual Psychology and Holism

The Goal of Interpersonal Relationships Is a Feeling of Community

Why Am I Only Interested In Myself?

You Are Not the Center of the World

Listen to the Voice of a Larger Community

Do Not Rebuke or Praise

The Encouragement Approach

How to Feel You Have Value

Exist in the Present

People Cannot Make Proper Use of Self

THE FIFTH NIGHT:

To Live in Earnest in the Here and Now

Excessive Self-Consciousness Stifles the Self

Not Self-Affirmation—Self-Acceptance

The Difference Between Trust and Confidence

The Essence of Work Is a Contribution to the Common Good

Young People Walk Ahead of Adults

Workaholism Is a Life-Lie

You Can Be Happy Now

Two Paths Traveled by Those Wanting to Be Special Beings

The Courage to Be Normal

Life Is a Series of Moments

Live Like You’re Dancing

Shine a Light on the Here and Now

The Greatest Life-Lie

Give Meaning to Seemingly Meaningless Life

Afterword

About the Authors

Authors’ Note

Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, and Alfred Adler are all giants in the world of psychology. This book is a distillation of Adler’s philosophical and psychological ideas and teachings, taking the form of a narrative dialogue between a philosopher and a young man.

Adlerian psychology enjoys a broad base of support in Europe and the United States, and presents simple and straightforward answers to the philosophical question: How can one be happy? Adlerian psychology might hold the key. Reading this book could change your life. Now, let us accompany the young man and venture beyond the door.

On the outskirts of the thousand-year-old city lived a philosopher who taught that the world was simple and that happiness was within the reach of every man, instantly. A young man who was dissatisfied with life went to visit this philosopher to get to the heart of the matter. This youth found the world a chaotic mass of contradictions and, in his anxious eyes, any notion of happiness was completely absurd.

Introduction

YOUTH: I want to ask you once again; you do believe that the world is, in all ways, a simple place?

PHILOSOPHER: Yes, this world is astonishingly simple and life itself is, too.

YOUTH: So, is this your idealistic argument or is it a workable theory? What I mean is, are you saying that any issues you or I face in life are simple too?

PHILOSOPHER: Yes, of course.

YOUTH: Alright then, but let me explain why I have come to visit you today. Firstly, I want to debate this with you until I am satisfied, and then, if possible, I want to get you to retract this theory.

PHILOSOPHER: Ha-ha.

YOUTH: Because I have heard all about your reputation. The word is that there is an eccentric philosopher living here whose teachings and arguments are hard to ignore, namely, that people can change, that the world is simple and that everyone can be happy. That is the sort of thing I have heard, but I find that view totally unacceptable, so I wanted to confirm things for myself. If I find anything you say completely off, I will point it out and then correct you . . . But will you find that annoying?

PHILOSOPHER: No, I would welcome the opportunity. I have been hoping to hear from a young person just like you and to learn as much as possible from what you can tell me.

YOUTH: Thanks. I do not intend to dismiss you out of hand. I will take your views into consideration and then look at the possibilities that present themselves. ‘The world is simple and life is simple, too’—if there is anything in this thesis that might contain truth, it would be life from a child’s point of view. Children do not have any obvious duties, like paying taxes or going to work. They are protected by their parents and society, and can spend days free from care. They can imagine a future that goes on forever and do whatever they want. They don’t have to see grim reality—they are blindfolded. So, to them the world must have a simple form. However, as a child matures to adulthood the world reveals its true nature. Very shortly, the child will know how things really are and what he is really allowed to do. His opinion will alter and all he will see is impossibility. His romantic view will end and be replaced by cruel realism.

PHILOSOPHER: I see. That is an interesting view.

YOUTH: That’s not all. Once grown up, the child will get entangled in all kinds of complicated relationships with people and have all kinds of responsibilities thrust upon him. That is how life will be, both at work and at home, and in any role he assumes in public life. It goes without saying that he will become aware of the various issues in society that he couldn’t understand as a child, including discrimination, war, and inequality, and he will not be able to ignore them. Am I wrong?

PHILOSOPHER: It sounds fine to me. Please continue.

YOUTH: Well, if we were still living at a time when religion held sway, salvation might be an option because the teachings of the divine were everything to us. All we had to do was obey them and consequently have little to think about. But religion has lost its power and now there is no real belief in God. With nothing to rely on, everyone is filled with anxiety and doubt. Everyone is living for themselves. That is how society is today, so please tell me—given these realities and in the light of what I have said—can you still say the world is simple?

PHILOSOPHER: There is no change in what I say. The world is simple and life is simple, too.

YOUTH: How? Anyone can see that it’s a chaotic mass of contradictions.

PHILOSOPHER: That is not because the world is complicated. It’s because you are making the world complicated.

YOUTH: I am?

PHILOSOPHER: None of us live in an objective world, but instead in a subjective world that we ourselves have given meaning to. The world you see is different from the one I see, and it’s impossible to share your world with anyone else.

YOUTH: How can that be? You and I are living in the same country, in the same time, and we are seeing the same things—aren’t we?

PHILOSOPHER: You look rather young to me, but have you ever drunk well water that has just been drawn?

YOUTH: Well water? Um, it was a long time ago, but there was a well at my grandmother’s house in the countryside. I remember enjoying the fresh, cold water drawn from that well on a hot summer’s day.

PHILOSOPHER: You may know this, but well water stays at pretty much the same temperature all year round, at about sixty degrees. That is an objective number—it stays the same to everyone who measures it. But when you drink the water in the summer it seems cool and when you drink the same water in the winter it seems warm. Even though it’s the same water, at the same sixty degrees according to the thermometer, the way it seems depends on whether it’s summer or winter.

YOUTH: So, it’s an illusion caused by the change in the environment.

PHILOSOPHER: No, it’s not an illusion. You see, to you, in that moment, the coolness or warmth of the well water is an undeniable fact. That’s what it means to live in your subjective world. There is no escape from your own subjectivity. At present, the world seems complicated and mysterious to you, but if you change, the world will appear more simple. The issue is not about how the world is, but about how you are.

YOUTH: How I am?

PHILOSOPHER: Right . . . It’s as if you see the world through dark glasses, so naturally everything seems dark. But if that is the case, instead of lamenting about the world’s darkness, you could just remove the glasses. Perhaps the world will appear terribly bright to you then and you will involuntarily shut your eyes. Maybe you’ll want the glasses back on, but can you even take them off in the first place? Can you look directly at the world? Do you have the courage?

YOUTH: Courage?

PHILOSOPHER: Yes, it’s a matter of courage.

YOUTH: Well, alright. There are tons of objections I would like to raise, but I get the feeling it would be better to go into them later. I would like to confirm that you are saying ‘people can change’, right?

PHILOSOPHER: Of course people can change. They can also find happiness.

YOUTH: Everyone, without exception?

PHILOSOPHER: No exceptions whatsoever.

YOUTH: Ha-ha! Now you’re talking big! This is getting interesting. I’m going to start arguing with you immediately.

PHILOSOPHER: I am not going to run away or hide anything. Let’s take our time debating this. So, your position is ‘people cannot change?’

YOUTH: That’s right, they can’t change. Actually, I am suffering myself because of not being able to change.

PHILOSOPHER: And at the same time, you wish you could.

YOUTH: Of course. If I could change, if I could start life all over again, I would gladly fall to my knees before you. But it could turn out that you’ll be down on your knees before me.

PHILOSOPHER: You remind me of myself during my own student days, when I was a hot-blooded young man searching for the truth, traipsing about, calling on philosophers . . .

YOUTH: Yes. I am searching for the truth. The truth about life.

PHILOSOPHER: I have never felt the need to take in disciples and have never done so. However, since becoming a student of Greek philosophy and then coming into contact with another philosophy, I have been waiting for a long time for a visit from a young person like you.

YOUTH: Another philosophy? What would that be?

PHILOSOPHER: My study is just over there. Go into it. It’s going to be a long night. I will go and make some hot coffee.

THE FIRST NIGHT:

Deny Trauma

The young man entered the study and sat slouched in a chair. Why was he so determined to reject the philosopher’s theories? His reasons were abundantly clear. He lacked self-confidence and, ever since childhood, this had been compounded by deep-seated feelings of inferiority with regard to his personal and academic backgrounds, as well as his physical appearance. Perhaps, as a result, he tended to be excessively self-conscious when people looked at him. Mostly, he seemed incapable of truly appreciating other people’s happiness and was constantly pitying himself. To him, the philosopher’s claims were nothing more than the stuff of fantasy.

The Unknown Third Giant

YOUTH: A moment ago, you used the words another philosophy, but I’ve heard that your specialty is in Greek philosophy.

PHILOSOPHER: Yes, Greek philosophy has been central to my life ever since I was a teenager. The great intellectual figures: Socrates, Plato, Aristotle. I am translating a work by Plato at the moment, and I expect to spend the rest of my life studying classical Greek thought.

YOUTH: Well, then what is this other philosophy?

PHILOSOPHER: It is a completely new school of psychology that was established by the Austrian psychiatrist Alfred Adler at the beginning of the twentieth century. It is generally referred to as Adlerian psychology.

YOUTH: Huh. I never would have imagined that a specialist in Greek philosophy would be interested in psychology.

PHILOSOPHER: I’m not very familiar with paths taken by other schools of psychology. However, I think it is fair to say that Adlerian psychology is clearly in line with Greek philosophy, and that it is a proper field of study.

YOUTH: I have a passing knowledge of the psychology of Freud and Jung. A fascinating field.

PHILOSOPHER: Yes, Freud and Jung are both renowned. Adler was one of the original core members of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society, which was led by Freud. His ideas were counter to Freud’s, and he split from the group and proposed an individual psychology based on his own original theories.

YOUTH: Individual psychology? Another odd term. So Adler was a disciple of Freud’s?

PHILOSOPHER: No, he was not. That misconception is common; we must dispel it. For one thing, Adler and Freud were relatively close in age, and the relationship they formed as researchers was founded upon equal footing. In this respect, Adler was very different from Jung, who revered Freud as a father figure. Though psychology primarily tends to be associated with Freud and Jung, Adler is recognized throughout the rest of the world, along with Freud and Jung, as one of the three giants in this field.

YOUTH: I see. I should have studied it more.

PHILOSOPHER: I suppose it’s only natural you haven’t heard of Adler. As he himself said, There might come a time when one will not remember my name; one might even have forgotten that our school ever existed. Then he went on to say that it didn’t matter. The implication being that if his school were forgotten, it would be because his ideas had outgrown the bounds of a single area of scholarship, and become commonplace, and a feeling shared by everyone. For example, Dale Carnegie, who wrote the international bestsellers How to Win Friends and Influence People and How to Stop Worrying and Start Living, referred to Adler as a great psychologist who devoted his life to researching humans and their latent abilities. The influence of Adler’s thinking is clearly present throughout his writings. And in Stephen Covey’s The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, much of the content closely resembles Adler’s ideas. In other words, rather than being a strict area of scholarship, Adlerian psychology is accepted as a realization, a culmination of truths and of human understanding. Yet Adler’s ideas are said to have been a hundred years ahead of their time, and even today we have not managed to fully comprehend them. That is how truly groundbreaking they were.

YOUTH: So your theories are developed not from Greek philosophy initially but from the viewpoint of Adlerian psychology?

PHILOSOPHER: Yes, that’s right.

YOUTH: Okay. There’s one more thing I’d like to ask about your basic stance. Are you a philosopher? Or are you a psychologist?

PHILOSOPHER: I am a philosopher, a person who lives philosophy. And, for me, Adlerian psychology is a form of thought that is in line with Greek philosophy, and that is philosophy.

YOUTH: All right, then. Let’s get started.

Why People Can Change

YOUTH: First, let’s plan the points of discussion. You say people can change. Then you take it a step further, saying that everyone can find happiness.

PHILOSOPHER: Yes, everyone, without exception.

YOUTH: Let’s save the discussion about happiness for later and address change first. Everyone wishes they could change. I know I do, and I’m sure anyone you might stop and ask on the street would agree. But why does everyone feel they want to change? There’s only one answer: because they cannot change. If it were easy for people to change, they wouldn’t spend so much time wishing they could. No matter how much they wish it, people cannot change. And that’s why there are always so many people getting taken in by new religions and dubious self-help seminars and any preaching on how everyone can change. Am I wrong?

PHILOSOPHER: Well, in response, I’d ask why you are so adamant that people can’t change.

YOUTH: Here’s why. I have a friend, a guy, who has shut himself in his room for several years. He wishes he could go out and even thinks he’d like to have a job, if possible. So he wants to change the way he is. I say this as his friend, but I assure you he is a very serious person who could be of great use to society. Except that he’s afraid to leave his room. If he takes even a single step outside, he suffers palpitations, and his arms and legs shake. It’s a kind of neurosis or panic, I suppose. He wants to change, but he can’t.

PHILOSOPHER: What do you think the reason is that he can’t go out?

YOUTH: I’m not really sure. It could be because of his relationship with his parents, or because he was bullied at school or work. He might have experienced a kind of trauma from something like that. But then, it could be the opposite—maybe he was too pampered as a child and can’t face reality. I just don’t know, and I

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