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This is good, and I want to clarify: - It is ALWAYS good to relentlessly respect your feelings of discomfort. They know something. - AND you can keep moving despite being terrified, engage while uncomfortable. https://t.co/ywOgqpekQS

Your discomfort and dissonance KNOWS something. https://t.co/58vyqEmSoV

The Emotional TRUTH of the situation. The KNOWING of my dissonance. The ALREADY EXISTING nature of my feelings. The bringing to light the POSITION I am already in, conscious or not. The disgusting FELT EXPERIENCE of the world even if it doesn’t feel right. All these make me.

Respect it relentlessly. https://t.co/9VfzlHANzJ

I get mad anytime anyone’s system ever feels danger and they don’t acknowledge it and treat it as real, because that feeling fucking happened, and it knows something, and you must treat it with the sheer and utmost respect because you are a living mfer and your system deserves it https://t.co/oBV86maRaY

That’s what “being yourself” means. https://t.co/2WrL4Mli7y

At the same time, your mind can arrive at an (un)conscious agreement that despite the discomfort, you want to forge on. https://t.co/GXriVP1NqJ

It’s different than FORCING myself to move. That’s DISRESPECTING my head. Instead, my system recognises my head is jammed and incapable of guidance in this movement, so I switch to a different compass, that I have built TRUST in over time in incremental ways.

One day I’ll write a book on this, but a healthy relationship with self is as a healthy relationship to a team. Non-self-coercion is a lot like non-coercion of other people, that you probably already have some intuitions about.

Imagine you’re running a business with someone. Or launching the product. Or something. One cool way of navigating disagreements is the 1–10 system. Every time a decision comes up (“I think the sign up flow should be shorter”), you can go, “I’m a 6 on this, what about you?”

Build trust, sychronise (spend a LOT of time synchronising your brain), relentlessly respect and acknowledge every feeling as real. You can be uncomfortable, yet non-coercive. https://t.co/oBV86maRaY

Ignore everything I’m saying and live your life if that’s working for you. But gosh, if you’re like me, and feel scarred by coercion in some way, or if it’s been egging you if that’s wrong, or you want a different way, I’m 100% here for it.

Important keyword: buy-in. https://t.co/8lAFS3vgLA

If you think you need coercion, you’re probably making coercion mean something it doesn’t have to. Malcolm puts it well. https://t.co/XFRzUOFB9I

@AskYatharth @ChanaMessinger > I really, really think if you think coercion is “needed” then you’re taking coercion to means something it doesn’t have to. This! Get you a definition of coercion such that you understand both: - why you sometimes think need it - why you actually don't ever need it