Sunday, December 17, 2017

Teaching Yourself Hatred

I have mentioned here at least once the principle of getting someone to like you by asking them to do a favor for you, rather than by doing a favor for them.  You might remember the story of Ben Franklin getting a political opponent to lend him a difficult-to-obtain book, and that creating a relationship of cooperation.

It occurs to me this morning that this likely occurs with hatred as well.  If you do something mean to person, such as throwing them under the bus to colleagues, or losing your temper, then they must be a bad person, because you, a good person, would not otherwise treat someone that way. It likely intensifies or solidifies as we go forward.

If you treat people well, you will like them better.  They might not be any better, but you will think so.  If you treat people poorly, you will learn to hate them. You might make them worse people by doing so, certainly, yet even if they remain unaffected, you will perceive them as worse.

4 comments:

Sam L. said...

I can't say that it teaches hatred, but it certainly will develop a really bad habit.

Zachriel said...

Assistant Village Idiot: You might remember the story of Ben Franklin getting a political opponent to lend him a difficult-to-obtain book, and that creating a relationship of cooperation.

"People who can't accept a gift have nothing to give themselves."

— De Gankelaar in [i]Karakter[/i] by Ferdinand Bordewijk.

james said...

I've heard something like this before, and it agrees well with my own experiences.

This turned up, there's probably another source somewhere with different wording.

Christopher B said...

agree with james and sam. I don't know about hatred but you can certainly make yourself miserable by exhibiting a bad attitude towards others. I still think the best self-help advice I found after my first marriage ended was to avoid acting out on negative feelings. I didn't always follow it but I'm still on speaking terms with my ex-wife.

This also follows a theme at Schneiderman's which I recall him posting on recently. Feelings mirror actions much more reliably than feeling prompts action, despite what conventional wisdom says.