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    <title>communities &amp;mdash; zushi&#39;s place</title>
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    <pubDate>Sat, 18 Jul 2026 13:04:14 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title>Some thoughts on Anxiety</title>
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      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Imgur&#xA;&#xA;Recently I&#39;ve felt some anxiety towards going back to work, which has been interesting to reflect back upon.&#xA;&#xA;While at Fractal, I&#39;ve met some people who seem very brave to me - they are willing to forego conventional job opportunities to pursue things with very low odds of success/impact like starting their own classes.&#xA;&#xA;When I ask them about how they found the courage to do so when they could have gone for very high-status things, they would say that if you think about it, failure doesn&#39;t say that much about yourself.&#xA;&#xA;I agree with this on a rational level, but find it hard to square with on an intuitive level. When I asked them about this, they said that &#34;surrounding yourself with supportive people&#34; helps a lot.&#xA;&#xA;Thinking about my recent mindset, I do think this latter explanation has a lot of truth to them. When you interact with a lot of new people (for me, this seems to happen recently in the context of dating), they tend to use employment as a judge of your worth. This doesn&#39;t happen when you are usually in a supportive community. I find that when I prioritize interacting with new people, my anxiety goes up accordingly.&#xA;&#xA;What this provides at least, I think, is a tool to help deal with anxiety. If you believe that your community are essentially the correct one, then hanging with a community with aligned norms will help you with the unusual status signals of the real world.&#xA;&#xA;br/&#xA;But I think the question this begs is - what is the correct way to look at status? I&#39;m not sure the broader population is by default &#34;correct&#34;. It is just the most popular option currently. And I think that defaults towards &#34;correct&#34;, but is not necessarily always so.&#xA;&#xA;I have some ideas as to ways to look at this, such as the psychological health, connectedness, and the diversity &amp; representativeness of the population composition of the community, but it&#39;s something I may want to save for later.&#xA;&#xA;--&#xA;Categorized under: #interactions, #communities, #sociology&#xA;&#xA;!--more&lt;div id=&#34;commento&#34;/div--  ]]&gt;</description>
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<p>Recently I&#39;ve felt some anxiety towards going back to work, which has been interesting to reflect back upon.</p>

<p>While at Fractal, I&#39;ve met some people who seem very brave to me – they are willing to forego conventional job opportunities to pursue things with very low odds of success/impact like starting their own classes.</p>

<p>When I ask them about how they found the courage to do so when they could have gone for very high-status things, they would say that if you think about it, failure doesn&#39;t say that much about yourself.</p>

<p>I agree with this on a rational level, but find it hard to square with on an intuitive level. When I asked them about this, they said that “surrounding yourself with supportive people” helps a lot.</p>

<p>Thinking about my recent mindset, I do think this latter explanation has a lot of truth to them. When you interact with a lot of new people (for me, this seems to happen recently in the context of dating), they tend to use employment as a judge of your worth. This doesn&#39;t happen when you are usually in a supportive community. I find that when I prioritize interacting with new people, my anxiety goes up accordingly.</p>

<p>What this provides at least, I think, is a tool to help deal with anxiety. If you believe that your community are essentially the correct one, then hanging with a community with aligned norms will help you with the unusual status signals of the real world.</p>

<p><br/>
But I think the question this begs is – what is the correct way to look at status? I&#39;m not sure the broader population is by default “correct”. It is just the most popular option currently. And I think that defaults towards “correct”, but is not necessarily always so.</p>

<p>I have some ideas as to ways to look at this, such as the psychological health, connectedness, and the diversity &amp; representativeness of the population composition of the community, but it&#39;s something I may want to save for later.</p>

<p>—
Categorized under: <a href="https://zushis-place.writeas.com/tag:interactions" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">interactions</span></a>, <a href="https://zushis-place.writeas.com/tag:communities" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">communities</span></a>, <a href="https://zushis-place.writeas.com/tag:sociology" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">sociology</span></a></p>


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      <pubDate>Thu, 11 May 2023 18:06:52 +0000</pubDate>
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