M
Moonomyth
Student
- Feb 6, 2020
- 196
When I post here, I complain a lot about the platitudes people use when trying to help people in recovery, whether they're pro-life or not. I don't need to give concrete examples here beyond the basic "It gets better!" and so on. You've probably all heard it in some form or another.
After a lot of recent thought I have to go a bit further in my complaints about this, because I've realized that the whole general aesthetic of recovery as it's presented in modern pop-psych and self-help keeps putting me off of recovery itself and necessary work I need to do in order to get well.
Bland-but-positive phrases of affirmation, soft and non-threatening colors, quiet music, focuses on "wellness" that encroach on holistic, homeopathic, and often pseudoscientific practices; all of them feel so damn twee that I can't take them in good faith even when they're meant to be in good faith. Worse, that aesthetic is so omnipresent that they make me leery, as if recovery would make me the kind of person who sees that aesthetic as good and useful.
I want to be well, but if being well means becoming that kind of person, then it's a serious enough tradeoff to make me pause. Not only because I don't want to adopt that kind of aesthetic in my life, but because it means I run the risk of becoming the person spouting the platitudes I hate to someone else.
Anybody else here feel this way? Has anybody found recovery resources which don't rely on these kinds of aesthetic approaches?
After a lot of recent thought I have to go a bit further in my complaints about this, because I've realized that the whole general aesthetic of recovery as it's presented in modern pop-psych and self-help keeps putting me off of recovery itself and necessary work I need to do in order to get well.
Bland-but-positive phrases of affirmation, soft and non-threatening colors, quiet music, focuses on "wellness" that encroach on holistic, homeopathic, and often pseudoscientific practices; all of them feel so damn twee that I can't take them in good faith even when they're meant to be in good faith. Worse, that aesthetic is so omnipresent that they make me leery, as if recovery would make me the kind of person who sees that aesthetic as good and useful.
I want to be well, but if being well means becoming that kind of person, then it's a serious enough tradeoff to make me pause. Not only because I don't want to adopt that kind of aesthetic in my life, but because it means I run the risk of becoming the person spouting the platitudes I hate to someone else.
Anybody else here feel this way? Has anybody found recovery resources which don't rely on these kinds of aesthetic approaches?