• sqgl@beehaw.org
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    7 months ago

    If you’re laying out in the freezing cold, drinking some alcohol may be the only way to warm up and get to sleep

    That is a popular myth. The truth is the opposite.

    The feeling of warmth is the heat leaving your body and the receptors on your skin are detecting it. Meanwhile your core temperature is going down.

    • Unicorn 🌳@mander.xyz
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      7 months ago

      Then perhaps a better phrasing is “may be the only way to feel warm and get to sleep”, even if it doesn’t actually warm you.

      • sqgl@beehaw.org
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        7 months ago

        Regardless, it is a bad decision by the homeless person and an example which a better informed author would have left out. Insomnia is less harmful than hypothermia.

        • NecroMemories@beehaw.org
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          7 months ago

          insomnia itself and especially caused by trauma can be much more harmful, the author did choose a weird and stereotypical example but if you can’t even get a night’s relief from your stressful impossible to escape situation. after years of a situation why wouldn’t you just assume the long term is bleak and prioritize short term counter productive relief.

          assuming dying is something you’d be avoiding at all costs at that point really shows a lack of empathy

          • millie@beehaw.org
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            7 months ago

            As someone who’s literally been in the figurative position you’re using to attack someone:

            1. Neither I nor anyone else who’s experienced homelessness is a pawn for your Internet argument bullshit. How dare you? Go pay the next panhandler you see $50 as penance.

            2. You are completely wrong. It is absolutely horrible and disgusting that you’re out here arguing that someone might want to freeze to death. These are the words of someone who’s never been more than a little chilly, not someone who’s had to struggle against the cold to survive.

            3. Seriously, go give a homeless person $50 and get our shared struggle out of your mouth.

          • sqgl@beehaw.org
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            7 months ago

            You are assuming they were making an informed decision in order to paint me as a monster. Nice.

        • bitwolf@lemmy.one
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          7 months ago

          There is more to it than temperature that is overlooked by brevity. When you’re in a stressful, and uncomfortable, situation like that the numbness helps with the cold, possibly uneven, ground.

          It can quiet the mind. And the inhibition can help nullify the fight or flight response aiding in getting to sleep.

          There are several properties of alcohol that makes it seem like a reasonable deduction to drink a bit in order to sleep. Even if it is harmful and could compound the suffering down the line.

  • SquishyPandaDev@yiffit.net
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    7 months ago

    What this comes down to and what is ultimately the better question, why are so many people unable to sympathizes with others?

      • t3rmit3@beehaw.org
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        7 months ago

        They’re just brainwashed by puritanical, capitalist “work ethic”. A lot of people who have nothing and work their way up by engaging with systems that steal their labor, in turn see those systems as good because they’re ahead of where they were before, without understanding that those systems intentionally create situations of poverty in order to drive disadvantageous labor participation.

  • KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    This is pretty interesting. Reminds me of the ADHD posts on here where people get their meds right and are like “I have superpowers now. I just think about doing something and I do it.”

    I would like to add something else: laziness and relaxation are totally fine as a part of your life. Athletes know that how you recover from training is as important as the training you do. They literally schedule rest days, and rest periods in each day. If you want to do anything well, you have to have time away from it to recover.

    • bleistift2@feddit.de
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      7 months ago

      Another succinct quote: “The brain learns during the breaks.” Repeating the same thing uninterrupted in order to learn it won’t help.

  • davehtaylor@beehaw.org
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    7 months ago

    100% agree.

    I would also add our Individualistic and Puritanical culture to the mix of causes. We’re told all of your problems are 100% in your control, and that if you’re not working 100% of the time that you’re a worthless piece of shit that doesn’t deserve to live, that no structural issues exist, that there’s nothing you can’t 100% overcome with enough individual determination. It’s so unbelievably toxic and unhealthy, and causes people to not only not have sympathy or empathy for others, but to see empathy as a negative trait, as a weakness.

      • davehtaylor@beehaw.org
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        7 months ago

        That’s such a meaningless sentiment. Sure, I can try to “feel positive” about my ability to navigate or overcome systemic issues, but that doesn’t make it so that I actually can. This is just “pull yourself up by your bootstraps” thinking with a toxic positivity veneer.

      • pearable@lemmy.ml
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        7 months ago

        Sorta, this kind of thinking can only take you so far before the dissonance destroys your mental health.

        Additionally, not everyone believes that just your mental state is yours to control. Many folks justify their own wealth by believing that they deserve everything they have and that people who have less by extension deserve their poverty.

  • liv@beehaw.org
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    7 months ago

    Thanks, this is a great article. It completely tallies with my experience teaching higher ed as well.

  • Elise@beehaw.org
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    7 months ago

    I make high tech stuff but had a 40% attendence rate and was terrible in school. I’ve always loved learning.

  • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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    7 months ago

    A lot of really good points on this, and I mostly agree. But I do go to university with a guy who is actively lazy: if there’s a choice of spending 10 minutes on a task to do it properly or 30 seconds on it to do it shittily, he’ll do the 30 second version every damned time because it’s “less effort”. He’s a nightmare on group projects. We don’t give him any tasks where it matters if the result is good anymore.

    • Gaywallet (they/it)@beehaw.orgOPM
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      7 months ago

      That sounds like a rough person to have to work with, but I think that’s more accurately described as a mismatch between values and priorities. He probably feels his time is more valuable than receiving a good grade. Well, either that or the idea of taking longer to create better quality is just undesirable to him for some reason.

      • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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        7 months ago

        I dunno. It’s weird. The guy’s absolutely convinced he’s going to walk into a job after graduation because he “looks the part”, like employers are just going to look at his hipster style and not care that his portfolio is a dumpster fire. He’s got the laziness of someone who was smart enough to coast through school without putting in any effort, and hasn’t woken up to the fact that a degree takes more than that.

          • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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            7 months ago

            And yet, shockingly, he’s not from a privileged background - he’s from a single parent family and his mother has spent her entire adult life on social security.

            • Gaywallet (they/it)@beehaw.orgOPM
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              7 months ago

              You don’t need to be privileged yourself to be drawn into it’s appeal. Surely it’ll be there for you, if you just do the right things! After all you’re not all that different, right?

  • 🦊 OneRedFox 🦊@beehaw.org
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    7 months ago

    The solution, instead, is to look for what is holding the procrastinator back. If anxiety is the major barrier, the procrastinator actually needs to walk away from the computer/book/word document and engage in a relaxing activity. Being branded “lazy” by other people is likely to lead to the exact opposite behavior.

    Often, though, the barrier is that procrastinators have executive functioning challenges — they struggle to divide a large responsibility into a series of discrete, specific, and ordered tasks. Here’s an example of executive functioning in action: I completed my dissertation (from proposal to data collection to final defense) in a little over a year. I was able to write my dissertation pretty easily and quickly because I knew that I had to a) compile research on the topic, b) outline the paper, c) schedule regular writing periods, and d) chip away at the paper, section by section, day by day, according to a schedule I had pre-determined.

    Yeah, this matches my experience from when I used to tutor people. They tended to be below grade level and would fall victim to a fear of failure, since their self-esteem has taken hits from struggling with the work, in their mind the failure would be confirmation that they’re stupid and would make them not want to try. Getting them to change their mentality resulted in more productive sessions going forward and accomplishing that required addressing the root causes of their anxiety and/or skill deficits.