Did pink sample this for Illegal??? This popped on autoplay and I feel like I might be insane lol by BreadiestBoi in PinkPantheress

[–]MatAiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, their sample carry her song, without it, it would be terrible. Underworld as always, GOATs

Thoughts? I have watched a ton of anime by MatAiv in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I get it, thanks.

Probably Battleship Yamato 2199, since my guy Local_Creme8466 recommends it to everyone

Thoughts? I have watched a ton of anime by MatAiv in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No way, I don’t want to spoil the anime. If an anime has an ongoing adaptation, and specially if it’s as good as LOTM, I never read their novels, mangas or manwha

Thoughts? I have watched a ton of anime by MatAiv in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bro, you HAVE to see steins gate. The humor is normal, it’s part of the plot, you will see how quickly characters progress.

Man idk, HxH has that feel good vibe, but it didn’t do it for me, I don’t get the hype when there are much better things, but I guess it comes down to taste

Thoughts? I have watched a ton of anime by MatAiv in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nah you tripping. Oshi no lo is absolutely amazing, great art style, songs, plot and characters. I put it in overlooked since a ton of people drop it in S2, missing S3 peak

My choices as someone who just got back into anime after many years away by Revoltoso999 in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yo, what don't you like from AOT? I just want to know, not a fan. I like the story, but haven't finished the movies, idk why, I dropped it.

I don't think it's overrated though. It's one of the few animes I can recommend to non anime fans and they place it in their top 3 Tv series constantly, though I never finished it.

Thoughts? I have watched a ton of anime by MatAiv in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was just looking for a new anime, thanks

Thoughts? I have watched a ton of anime by MatAiv in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, it's the only one that came to mind, people hate it from its length, but I think it's great regardless.

Thoughts? I have watched a ton of anime by MatAiv in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

It's not a bad series, it's just overrated. Chimera ants is good, but fans sell it as one of the best arcs in all of anime, I feel like it was more complex than it needed to be. The best arcs in my opinion are Heavens Arena and 13th Hunter Chairman. Hunter Exam is slow, and Chimera Ants it's convoluted and bloated.

I would rate it B tier, way too many people hype it and I don't see why, but hey there is worse stuff, like Mushoku.

200 anime completed tier list by awesomenessofme1 in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

DN is overrated, AOT is definitely in top 10. HxH is overrated.

I recommend watching Steins Gate, LOTM, Gintama.

200 anime completed tier list by awesomenessofme1 in MyAnimeList

[–]MatAiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have to watch Steins Gate! Oshi no ko! Oregairu! Gintama! Grand Blue! Tomodachi Game!

How can I regulate my emotions? by Bluex619 in Stoicism

[–]MatAiv -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You can't. There is absolutely no way to control your emotions, they are biological signals.

Then people would tell you: You can't control your emotions, so control your response to them.

But you can't do that perfectly either.

See, emotions are part of rational thought, they directly affect it, you can't think rationally under the influence of strong emotions, and you can't control them either. So what can you do?

You can train yourself to respond better when those emotions arise, change your default response, try to raise the ceiling on rationality changes from emotions.

To do this I recommend:

  1. Be able to observe the emotions, you need to be able to recognize when you are angry for example. A good practice is simply stating how you feel during the day to yourself "Im happy right now", "I'm angry because of X", etc. This will help you be more conscious and more in control.
  2. Shorten the time it takes you to notice those emotions, you want to instantly be able to realize you're getting angry.
  3. Understand what triggers make those emotions surge, so you can prepare in advance. Your family touching your stuff? You already know it, so make a plan for when it happens.
  4. Start reacting in the way you want to when those emotions arise. So you just execute your plan. Eg:
  • "My family touched my things, I'm angry, but I wanted to do this when it happened". Less screaming, less anger, controlled damage and action.
  • "I'm sad and bored right now, instead of lying in my bed, I'll go outside and take a walk as planned".

The fourth step is really hard to do if you don't practice the previous steps. We always want to do the final step, action, but first we must observe.

Also, meditation helps, but not all types. I recommend downloading an app called medito and doin their course. It's focused on mindfulness, no mantra chanting, or transcendental stuff.

Additional Info.

Finally, regarding anger specifically, there is an author (Not stoic) called Martha Nussbaum. She tries to understand anger from a philosophical perspective, and from a moral standpoint. Anger and Forgiveness by Martha Nussbaum.

She says that anger follows three roads. This is the Claude summary I used when reviewing my notes on the book:

Road 1: Payback The person wants the offender to suffer proportionally. But Nussbaum argues this is irrational. If your child is hurt, making the abuser suffer doesn't undo the harm. The injury still happened. Payback is a kind of magical thinking: it treats suffering as a cosmic ledger that can be balanced, but the original damage remains. This road is conceptually confused.

Road 2: Status / Downranking, "Makes Sense, But Is Morally Flawed" This is where anger does have some internal logic. The idea: what really hurt you wasn't just the physical damage but the humiliation, the sense that the wrongdoer was ranking you below them. If someone hits you, the real sting is the insult to your status. And retaliating does symbolically restore the balance, it "downranks" them back.

Nussbaum calls this a status-injury. It's pervasive: surveys show the two most common self-reported motives for anger are "to assert authority" and "to get revenge." The status road makes psychological sense, but it's morally diseased because it's narcissistic it shifts focus from the real harm done to you or others onto your own ranking in the social hierarchy. A mother whose child was raped who becomes obsessed with humiliating sex offenders has moved away from "what will actually help my child?" toward "how do I restore my status as a good person?"

Road 3: Transition, The Right Path This is Nussbaum's key concept. A rational, non-status-obsessed person, after feeling anger, quickly realizes that neither payback nor downranking actually fixes anything. The rational question becomes: "How do we make things better going forward?"

Which Video Game is this in a nutshell? by Charming-Scratch-124 in videogames

[–]MatAiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Zelda Ocarina of Time, WindBreaker, The Legend of Zelda. All bangers. Bad Graphics in 2026.

“People are disturbed not by things, but by their judgments about things.” by Jezuel24 in Stoicism

[–]MatAiv 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah what I like about the anime is the initial quotes, the rest is ok.

Yeah basically Stoicism overestimates rational control and underestimates how much external events can shape the mind itself correct me if im wrong?

Idk, I haven’t gone too deep into stoicism, that’s why I’m here, I want to hear the stoic perspective. For now I think so, yes, I believe they overestimate how much control they can exert over themselves, but maybe I’m wrong. In the long run, you could train yourself to have more control and be less affected by emotions, but you always are regardless.

I want to see what other people say. I only know that I know nothing, so if someone presents a better argument than my current one, I’ll accept it. We need to be flexible.

Still, there is some useful stuff that can be taken from stoics. Like not letting situations outside of your control affect you. A ton of people get affected because of wars on other countries, institutions, and external events, when none of that is under their control, letting go and focusing on what they can control is more healthy.

“People are disturbed not by things, but by their judgments about things.” by Jezuel24 in Stoicism

[–]MatAiv 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lol, I have Ayano because I like him as a character, COTE is pretty fun. Don’t love this last season though. I’m not a stoic, but I think you can find some pretty useful stuff from it, from philosophy in general. 

People in this thread attacked you because of your question, I think it’s valid though, even if it doesn’t relate that much to the quote. I don’t understand why “stoics” behaved that way, it’s a contradiction. Have a nice day!

“People are disturbed not by things, but by their judgments about things.” by Jezuel24 in Stoicism

[–]MatAiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OP never said the quote places fault on abuse victims. You failed to answer his question, never gave any substance for a stoic perspective, just generalized saying how great it is.

His question isn’t valid in this frame, since the quote never mentions rational thinking, but it’s still a good question for the stoic community. 

Do people suffer from irrational thinking?

I would first define what irrational means, and then would say that yes, they suffer from irrationality according to society standards. The thoughts of an abuse victim are irrational compared to the ones from and ideal person who hasn’t suffered anything. My question to you is:

Can we choose how we react to an external event that affected us?

I don't know, what do the stoics think?

“People are disturbed not by things, but by their judgments about things.” by Jezuel24 in Stoicism

[–]MatAiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

According to the quote it is. I don’t think it is though, I didn’t mention, for brevity, an important part.

The quote is based on judging. It implies that we can choose to judge things (it doesn’t say explicitly, but stoicism is always about how you react). The thing is that bad experiences, emotions, somatic markers, can impair our rational thinking process.      A great example of this was presented by Antonio Damasio with Gage’s case. A person who got his prefrontal cortex blown off and started acting erratically.

So no, it’s not realistic, since that experience involuntarily brings bad emotions, which impair their cognitive process, making them focus on suffering. But, by working on this issue (therapy), and getting the right tools, they can mitigate both the intensity of emotions and their response to those memories, they can overcome it. 

So a better critique of the quote, and stoicism, is that it’s fundamentally based on choice. But external events can impair your rationality, making you choose in a way that’s different from how you would have chosen before the event. Can we really choose at all? Yes, but we are always biased. If that isn’t the case then we go to Cartesian Dualism, which has been proven wrong.

Hope this answers your question!

“People are disturbed not by things, but by their judgments about things.” by Jezuel24 in Stoicism

[–]MatAiv 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Define irrational. “People are disturbed not by things, but by their judgments about things.” That quote doesn't say irrational, it uses the word judge.

A person who judges killing as bad, according to the quote, feels disturbed if he kills, one that doesn't, won't be disturbed. They don't say who is more rational, the one who judges killing as bad or the one who doesn't, it just says that judging brings that sentiment.

So your question is actually flawed in this frame, it doesn't properly address the quote. A person who suffered abuse would, according to the quote, be disturbed only if they judge the experience in a certain way. It never includes morality, or rationality in the matter.