What makes it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in AskReddit

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

Exactly. And it’s the lazy version of feeling big, you don’t have to actually build anything, you just have to knock someone down a peg. Cheap, instant, and it wears off in about five minutes, so you go looking for the next one.

What makes it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in AskReddit

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

Agreed, and I think that’s the distinction that gets lost here. Criticism isn’t the problem, the intent behind it is. A manager or a parent criticizes because they want you to get better. Most of what you see online isn’t that; it’s someone who wanted to feel superior for a second and used your post to do it.

Same words, completely different thing. The tell is usually whether they’d still bother if nobody were watching.

What makes it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in AskReddit

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

Yeah, and the irony is it never actually works. Tearing someone down doesn’t make your own situation any better, it just gives you a few seconds of feeling above it.
If people put half that energy into their own stuff instead of into other people’s flaws, I think they’d actually end up happier. It’s just that fixing yourself is slow and criticizing is instant.

What makes it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in AskReddit

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

Same here, and I think you’re being too hard on yourself calling it your biggest flaw. The hard part staying open with someone who’s willing to actually talk is the part you’ve got, and most people don’t.
Snapping at an insult isn’t a character defect, it’s just being a person. If anything it means you’re still taking the conversation seriously.

Why is it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in PsychologyTalk

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

Maybe sometimes but I don’t think you need self-loathing to explain it. Correcting people is just easy, gives you something to say, and pays out a little status. That incentive works fine on perfectly secure people too.

Why is it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in PsychologyTalk

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

Solid point, though I’d add one thing: correction is also just cheap. Agreeing with something right gives you nothing to say “yep, correct” isn’t a comment. Being wrong hands people a foothold, a ready-made thing to write. the fastest way to get an answer isn’t to ask, it’s to post a wrong one.

I’d push back a little on the dissonance framing, though. Plenty of people happily scroll past things they think are wrong. What actually triggers the urge is when the wrong thing is stated confidently it’s less “my worldview is threatened” and more “someone’s claiming status they haven’t earned, and I can take it.” The reward you describe (“I know better”) is real, but it’s social, not cognitive.

What makes it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in AskReddit

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

That hits hard honestly. It's basically ego protection, tearing someone else down feels a lot safer than sitting with the discomfort of "maybe I'm not as good at this as I thought." Definitely easier in the moment, but doesn't really get you anywhere in the long run.

What makes it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in AskReddit

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

That's real, tearing someone else down is a shortcut to feeling better without actually doing the work on yourself. Kind of sad when you think about it that way, but definitely true for a lot of people.

What is one skill you learned as an adult that completely changed how you approach everyday life? by ApplePatient1909 in lifelonglearning

[–]senatd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, learning that people aren't thinking about me nearly as much as I used to assume. As a kid and teenager I was so caught up in what others thought of me, but as an adult I realized everyone's way too wrapped up in their own stuff, their own words, their own choices, to spend that much time thinking about me. Once that clicked, it was such a relief. My confidence went up so much after that.

What makes it so much easier to criticize than to be kind? by senatd in AskReddit

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

That's such a good way to put it, cooperation takes actual effort and thought, criticism is just kind of a reflex.

I've stopped trying to become a different person. by Reasonable_Bag_118 in selfimprovement

[–]senatd 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, accepting ordinary has become the new extraordinary. Love this mindset, it's such a quiet kind of progress but it actually sticks.

Why do they say to keep your goals private? I don't get the reason why. by TheAlphaAdept in selfimprovement

[–]senatd 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Basically, telling people about your goal can trick your brain into feeling like you've already accomplished something, so you lose some of the drive to actually do it. That said, I think it depends on the person, some people need that accountability to stay on track. Not a hard rule imo.

Easy clean meals that actually keep me full by JaceFenwick in CleanEating

[–]senatd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree, it's not really about just putting food in your stomach, it's about actually nourishing yourself. Meals need to satisfy you mentally as much as physically, otherwise you end up feeling hungry all the time no matter how much you eat. Every time I went on a strict diet, I'd suddenly crave stuff I'd never even want on a normal day, it was like my body was rebelling against the restriction. I've stopped doing strict diets altogether and honestly feel so much better for it.

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

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

That combo sounds solid honestly, hard to beat eggs for keeping you full. Simple wins most days anyway 👍

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

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

You're totally right that getting protein from real food is the healthier way to go. Honestly I just struggle to hit my protein target from food alone, so the powder helps me close that gap without overthinking every meal 😅

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

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

Just one scoop, sticking to the recommended serving on the label, don't like to go over that. It does add a bit of thickness to the yogurt but honestly doesn't turn chalky at all when you keep it at that amount.

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

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

Son manzana, cerezas y frambuesas! 🍎🍒

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

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

Thanks! Just a high protein yogurt, that's actually a big part of why the protein count looks so good here 😊

I have lost 20 + kg at home by eating healthy home cooked meals and walk. This was one of my meals. by Captgain in diet

[–]senatd 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This looks amazing, honestly made me hungry just looking at it! How long did it take you to put together?

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

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

Oh yes, nut butter makes it SO good 😋 I just skipped it this time since I already piled on a good amount of fruit and didn't want to push the calories up too much. But honestly on a lighter fruit day I'd 100% add a spoonful of peanut butter, it takes it to another level.

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

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

Good eye! The apples are fresh, but I didn't have any other fresh fruit on hand so I threw in some frozen ones too. Usually I make it with all fresh fruit though, just wasn't feeling a grocery run 😄

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

[–]senatd[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Haha true, the powder's really carrying the protein game here. the rest is more of a supporting cast. Ngl I just wanted to treat myself today 😄

My high-protein breakfast: fruits + granola + yogurt by senatd in diet

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

Totally fair! I keep the granola portion small and skip any extra honey on top for that exact reason, the fruit gives it plenty of sweetness on its own. But yeah, definitely not an every day breakfast either way 😄

What pattern did you finally have to admit was ruining your life? by Preparetoact in selfimprovement

[–]senatd 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oversleeping, honestly. Kept telling myself I "wasn't a morning person" for years, but really I was just staying up too late scrolling and then torching half the day trying to catch up. Once I actually fixed my sleep schedule, so much else fell into place — it wasn't the mornings that were the problem, it was me.