I noticed that in western culture most people are into instant gratification. In capitalist cultures entertainment takes up most of an average person’s day. Social media, extensive amounts on the internet, prolonged hours of videogames, etc.

I’ve learned about a few things that would cut down on this, such as mostly listening to nature sounds and ambience rather than stimulating music, going outside and connecting to nature, and deleting social media. What other tips and advice would help reduce instant gratification?

Also, what cultures aren’t dominated by instant gratification? How is there way of life, and what sources could bring more information about them?

  • @Giyuu
    link
    91 year ago

    Read read read in depth writings. Doesn’t matter what it is, but preferably academic or technical to put your brain to work. Even 15 mins per day will make you feel better.

    The more you stick to one topic and finish it the better, but even if you jump around each day to something different, as long as you are comprehending and digesting what you are reading, it’s still good.

    • @SunshinerOPM
      link
      1
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      This. I love reading self help books, political theory and history. I just recently started reading “Negroes and the Gun.” Very interesting book! It explains how black people protected themselves from oppression. Ranging from slavery to the Black Panther Party and more :))

  • @HaSch
    link
    21 year ago

    Don’t try to eliminate instant gratification outright, try delaying it instead. Between preparing a meal and enjoying it, clean up the kitchen first, go for a short walk, prepare a coffee, and eat a salad or a raw vegetable before starting. Before you reach for social media, exercise just a little, read a few pages from a book, solve a puzzle, or do a language lesson. At the start, allow just 3 minutes for each of these routines, if one of them ends up satisfying or captivating you, or you just need more time for it, take it. Don’t try imposing a hard time limit on the gratification that follows because you will end up breaking it, instead make it a rule that you only engage with the gratification itself once your checklist of conditions is all met. As time goes on, queue up more and more of the things you want to learn or accomplish inside that checklist, and your day - and eventually your week - will begin to become exhausted through meaningful or at least useful activities and structure itself, and this structure will depend less and less on the promise of an actual instant gratification at the end.

    • @SunshinerOPM
      link
      21 year ago

      This is actually brilliant! It reminds me of the WPP method, it gets work done without feeling guilty about long hours of entertainment, and it makes the gratification so much sweeter. You’ll always get that feeling of relaxing after work.