Things that I imagine would be cool to do with my kids (if I manage to have some): taking bedtime as a moment to reminisce about the day together.
Recalling enjoyable moments is by itself enjoyable. So ask, what parts of the day did you like? What were some good moments? What about it was enjoyable?
At first, just mention things. "You seemed to really like playing with those toys today." "You looked happy being with uncle X."
Hopefully soon the kids will notice that this is enjoyable, and start bringing up things on their own. (And feel like that was their own idea.)
Later, start also covering the moments when they were unhappy or upset. Are they feeling okay now, anything about it that they still want or need to discuss?
Even if they're fine now, make sure to take those moments and reframe them in an explicitly accepting light (all emotions are fine, including negative ones):
- "That really was upsetting for you but now you're okay, all bad feelings pass eventually."
- "You held yourself together back there even though you were really unhappy about it, that was great. You could have chosen not to even try, but you did do it."
"We both got a little mad at each other earlier but that's okay, kids need to be mad at dad sometimes and sometimes dad gets mad back. I try not to, but that's on me, and I love you no matter what."
Then maybe recall some happy moments from *earlier* bedtime reviews. Keep those unhappy moments firmly sandwiched between good ones.
Also tell them about all the moments today when they made me and mom happy and how we love them. Then a bedtime story and wishing good night.
Hopefully the conversations should keep getting more sophisticated as the kids get older. Get into topics like the value of negative emotions, and what unmet need their unhappiness in that moment was a signal of. Help brainstorm ways they could meet that need better from now on.
Then one day when they're adults, hopefully they'll be so firmly in the habit of going through the good moments and the lessons-in-the-bad-moments that they won't need me for it anymore, and it has just become automatic.
And if it hasn't, that's cool too. At least we had lots of good moments together doing it.
(Or if this whole thing always just seems uninteresting and dumb to them, then we'll just have to come up with something completely different that they'll like more.)
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Notes on Soulmaking Dharma, based on a conversation with my friend.
Epistemic status: had dozens of hours of lecture summarized to me in two hours. Summarizing that and adding own interpretations. Might get a lot wrong, don't really know what I'm talking about.
Soulmaking Dharma is a Buddhist practice mostly developed by Rob Burbea and Catherine McGee. This page has various additional resources, which I have not looked at. \:D/ reddit.com/r/streamentry/…
First thing to note is that Mainstream Buddhist (MB) practice focuses on reducing suffering. Soulmaking Dharma isn't about that; it's more about something like creating and understanding meaning. That may reduce suffering or keep it the same, but either way, that's not the focus.
We tend to think of a "cult leader" as someone who *intentionally* sets out to create a cult. But most cult-like things probably *don't* form like that.
A lot of people feel a strong innate *desire* to be in a cult. Michael suggests it's rooted in an infant's need to attach to a caregiver, and to treat them as a fully dependable authority to fix all problems - a desire which doesn't necessarily ever go fully away.
Once someone becomes a teacher of some sort, even if they had absolutely no desire to create a cult, they will regardless attract people who *want* to be their cultists.
It's kinda weird how much harder it feels to speak English than it does to read it. For writing, sentences spontaneously compose themselves in my head, just waiting to be written out.
For speaking, it's often as if I have to forcibly hammer my meaning to the kinds of words that would convey the message, and even then it feels like half the nuance I'm trying to convey is lost and I'm super-aware of everything that I feel like I'm mispronouncing.
It's not just a general "I find writing easier than speaking" thing either, since it's accompanied by a yearning to just be able to switch to Finnish where my intended meanings are much more likely to naturally fall into the kinds of shapes that mostly convey my intent.
Every now and then I look at my Google Drive and find documents that I started writing and of which I have no clue what they're about.
Like this one. Okay? Well, did you? Or did something happen before? What was it? And why is this titled "people details"? I'll never know.
Okay...? In light of what? Where's this going?
I *think* this one was sketching out some Dwarf Fortress -style game that was to simulate individual people who acquired habits by reinforcement learning. Didn't get very far, though.
Says something about me that I'm going through a list of *legal policies* all nerding out, like "okay, hmm, that's good, that's good, that's not so great, okay cool, can I change that one maybe we'll see, hmm..."
I promised to uphold national values instead of enacting democratic reforms but a lot of these policies sound kinda democratic to me, where's my real ultimate supreme power, I can even be impeached :| oh well, this will do (until I can change it maybe)
on the other hand the president has no term limits so that's good