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The new approach: there are good and bad forms of envy, and "good envy" may spur us to improve ourselves.
Malicious envy arrives with anger, frustration and a sense of wanting to take an advantage away from another person, says Jan Crusius, psychologist and professor of motivation and emotion at University of Greifswald in Germany.Analysis of one's own feelings is a basic psychological technique that applies to a wide range of situations, including internal battles with envy.
Benign envy, on the other hand, is when you wish you were in someone else’s position but don’t feel compelled to tear them down. That envy can spark self-reflection and the motivation to set new goals.
“When you say, ‘I’m so jealous of your boat,’ you might mean, ‘I’m so envious of your money, your freedom, or your success,’” said author and podcast host Elise Loehnen, whose new book explores why women often repress feelings like pride and envy.Your humble blogger has never been able to use negative emotions successfully. I'll-show-them drives comic-book villains. In real life it may lead to short-lived achievement, but satisfaction is very rarely the result.
Ask yourself how you’d feel if your name was attached to the thing you envy. Consider the critiques as well as the praise that might come with it. That alone may quell your envy; if it doesn’t, and the idea is still appealing, use that answer to guide your pursuits. If it doesn’t hold allure, you might be envying an idea, rather than reality.
The cure for envy is a long life; many of the aspects that we envied in others, e.g., wealth and social recognition, become much less important with the passage of time. Also, it turned out that some of our heroes had feet of clay, while others had struggles that made their days the opposite of halcyonic.
Victory over envy results when one truly rejoices in the good fortunes of others.
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