2022-10-19 ------------------------------------------------------------------ There's a certain group of intellectually minded people who are victims of an insidious fallacy. They are victims of statistics. Let's say you are addicted to smoking or alcohol and someone tells you that you should stop. You might take a look at the statistics and say that it is very hard to quit. So many people fail. Believing this you have made it even harder for yourself to quit. Then you look at the drop-out rates of people who start diets. Now you say it is very hard to lose weight or stay fit. You look at divorce rates and say it doesn't actually make much sense to even try to get a spouse. The fallacy is that you are not a group of people. You are a person who is capable of coming up with strategies to help themselves achieving their goals. The statistics are making you think you are just an average person. They are in fact making you more average than you would be. They are making you think that don't have your own unique strengths. A highly developed narrow area of strength can be used for several general purposes. I think that a large amount of people would actually be capable of achieving a lot more (of things they themselves consider achievements) if they could find their strenghts. If you believe the framing that is implicit in the worldview of statistics, you deprive yourself of your possibilities. ------------------------------------------------------------------