5 Things I Learned As An Angry Introverted Individual

You’re reading 5 Things I Learned As An Angry, Introverted Individual, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’re enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

So I’m currently 30 years old and I’m an angry person. An introverted one at that. People around me may see me as weird, or even crazy considering the different things I do. Truly, I tend to isolate myself, especially when the anger feels overwhelming. It’s okay though. I don’t expect them to understand, and sometimes, that’s the way I like it. That’s the life of an introvert for you. We tend to look inwards more than anything. And we do it at our pace, in our own space. I wish I could say this article is going to be super inspiring and helpful, but it’s not. These are just observations of my own life. Hope it helps anyway. 1) Do things your own way, screw what others think I’ve honestly come to believe that anger management is complete bullshit. It does not help me. It makes me react to my anger too much. And it makes me feel like I’m in denial as it forces me to forgive my wrongdoers, something I am not ready to do. Or, most commonly, you’re taught to meditate (or whatever woo-woo technique) to calm down. None of that helped. What helped me the most? It was acknowledging that I am angry person and that I’ve accepted it. I will continue to be angry. Yes, you heard that right. I will continue to be angry, and that’s okay with me. Most will not understand it, but I don’t care anymore. After all, this is my life and I come up with the rules. Also, when you admit that you’ve a problem, it is easier on you and also a relief to accept who you are rather than constantly try to push it aside. Besides, I don’t act out in public. I never get in trouble, so I personally think I am doing alright. So go get it at your own pace. Do things your way. There’s no right or wrong for you unless you’re hurting yourself or others on an abusive level. Remember, you control the reins. 2) Isolation can be liberating This year, I made the decision to quit all of my Whatsapp groups. The groups consisted of a lot of my friends, some of whom I am even close to. But I left anyway. It was part of my endeavor to further my isolation. The average person would start to wonder why, as they talk about the benefits of being in chat groups. I just didn’t want to be one anymore. It kind of annoyed me that despite being in my own home, people have the power to be connected to me. And yes, some of these groups were toxic as they constantly gossiped non-stop. It was liberating to leave them, that much I can tell you. It was a form of power to me. Not many people would dare to leave a group like that because of logical reasons, hence fear of what others may think. Ignore the fear. Do what you want even if it seems minor or silly. Again, your life, your rules. If it’s minor and silly, then there’s no reason why it should have control over you. 3) Do not obey if you don’t want to I’ve reached a point in my life where I constantly ask myself, “Why should I obey?” Or “Why should I do the right thing here?” Because the followup is always, “I’m just going to be angry anyway.” I know that sounds cynical, but the thing is I’ve taken little steps to watch out for myself now. As I wrote about here before, being nice is not part of healing. Doing the right thing or merely being nice may not heal you at all. But of course, this isn’t to say you go into the end of the spectrum and actively be a jerk to hurt others. Just don’t say yes if you don’t want to. You can say no and reject people. You don’t have be nice all the time. Don’t even forgive if you don’t want to. Remember to be nice to yourself. Self-love is THAT important. 4) You can’t do nothing all day, so do the work For a while I took solace in simply lying in bed to do nothing. I’d either surf the net with my phone mindlessly or take a nap. But that only gave me a short burst of relief. Things like that can only help you so much and in the long run, it won’t do you any good. I also read that relying on a small rush of dopamine, from say, surfing porn would affect you negatively in the long run. That’s why you have to do the work. You need a sense of purpose. So be it your business or passion project, find the will to motivate yourself to do the work. You can’t ever be happy when you’re bored all the time. The boredom will eventually develop into something worse, like depression. 5) But sometimes, it is the human interaction that may be help you Recently, I did something totally out of the norm, which was going to help my mom out in her office. This was thoroughly different considering I’ve been working on business from home for years now. And I had a such a good time despite helping her with mundane tasks. It was there I interacted with her and also observed how she exchanged friendly banter with her neighbors. It wasn’t just a distraction from my emotional troubles, but it made me realize how a little bit of human relationship can help. For example, a simple joke told to you out of nowhere that made you laugh can make you feel good instantly. So it made me wonder: Could I be wrong? Am I too focused on myself and my problems? Could I need a complete change? Maybe yes. Maybe no. But as with life, too much of anything isn’t great. This applies to everyone, introvert or not. If you feel stuck with your problems, perhaps look around so you can get out there. Hope this article helps. Just for Pick The Brain readers Hey guys! Wanna be inspired even more? Doesn’t matter if you’re an introvert or not, this is for you. Get my free book. I’ll activate that happiness in you: 12 things happy people don’t give a f**k about! This free book only available through this link. Enjoy! Alden Tan is a passionate breakdancer and writer. He writes about honest and real self-improvement without the bullshit. Get his free book already!

You’ve read 5 Things I Learned As An Angry, Introverted Individual, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’ve enjoyed this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

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Cold sunrise by jeroen5 by jeroen5

What was a quick snapshot, became one of my favorite shots from my time in Sweden a few years ago.
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La Venecia de Portugal by charmen7 by charmen7

Aveiro es una ciudad portuguesa, capital del Distrito de Aveiro, en la Región Centro y subregión del Baixo Vouga, situada cerca de 55 km al norte de Coímbra. La ciudad ha sido frecuentemente denominada “La Venecia de Portugal”, por sus canales que atraviesan el centro de la ciudad; lo cual dota a la ciudad de una gran belleza, conjuntamente con el barrio viejo de “Beira Mar”, donde se conservan las tradicionales casas y los almacenes de sal de la ría. Aveiro is a Portuguese city, capital of the district of Aveiro, in the Centre Region and subregion of Baixo Vouga, located about 55 km north of Coimbra. The city has often been called “the Venice of Portugal” for its canals running through the city center; which provides the city of great beauty, together with the old district of “Beira Mar”, where traditional houses and salt stores the estuary preserved.
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Kunstmuseum Basel / Christ & Gantenbein

© Stefano Graziani

Architects: Christ & Gantenbein

Location: Basel, Switzerland

Area: 8079.0 sqm

Project Year: 2016

Photographs: Stefano Graziani, Walter Mair

Construction Manager: FS Architekten GmbH

Structural Engineer: ZPF Ingenieure AG

Building Services Engineer: Stokar + Partner AG

Project Consortium: ARGE Generalplaner KME Basel,Christ & Gantenbein AG / Peter Stocker AG

Owner: Municipality of the City of Basel

Client: Construction and Transport Department of the Canton of Basel-Stadt, Städtebau & Architektur,Hochbauamt.

© Walter Mair

From the architect. The Kunstmuseum Basel’s new building redefines a prominent location in the heart of the Basel. As a place for the exhibition and preservation of art as well as events, it embodies both a new departure and continuity.

The new and enlarged museum consists of two buildings that together form a unified presence in the urban space. They are in direct communication with each other across the street that runs between them. The new building’s roof line is level with that of the existing structure, so it meets its counterpart on an equal footing; its entrance looks out toward the main building’s arcades, which conversely enjoy an excellent view of its striking façade. The new building’s distinctive inverted corner is a symbolic response to the old Kunstmuseum’s no less distinctive projecting corner. At the same time, the indented façade is a gesture of welcome, an invitation. It frames the intersection, effectively turning it into its own forecourt.

© Stefano Graziani

Each  floor of the new building has two exhibition tracts connected vertically by the monumental central staircase. Together with the foyer zones, the staircase describes a free and expressive  figure in space illuminated from above by a large round skylight. By contrast, the gallery suites as such are structured by right angles. The rooms vary widely in size, ranging from cabinet to large hall. On average, the galleries in the new building are a good deal larger and hence more  flexible than those in the old building, while still hewing to classical expectations of what museum spaces should be like: serene and restrained, agreeably proportioned, and made of timeless materials. These are spaces that allow art to take center stage.

Section AA

Section BB

The rooms have a powerful physical presence. The elements that define them are clearly articulated components; assembled, they generate a tectonics that maximizes the architectural effect of the whole. The galleries feature an industrial parquet floor made of oak strips glued directly onto the screed and grouted with wood cement. The supporting wall made of concrete with gray rendering is similarly explicit, as is evident in the door and window reveals. Visibly fronting it, but set back at the edges, is the solid, ten-centimeter- thick plasterboard wall that serves as both substrate and backdrop for the paintings. As exposed structural elements, the prefabricated, sandblasted concrete ribs that span the galleries visualize the load-bearing relationship between walls and ceiling. Not only do they lend the ceiling its own specific structure, they also give direction to the space underneath.

© Stefano Graziani

In the foyer, the marble flooring and galvanized steel wall cladding come together in an aesthetic whole that is expressive of both difference and harmony at once. The unusual combination of two materials with radically different connotations generates the distinctive and unmistakable character of our building, in which contemporary technology is used to implement the timeless laws of architecture.

© Stefano Graziani

The actual connection between the main and new buildings beneath the road is not so much an underpass as an ensemble of large open spaces leading into a generous hall that is foyer, gallery, stage, experimental space, auditorium, and function room rolled into one. Here starts the central staircase of the new building, which echoes motifs of that in the main building: gray, veined Bardiglio marble from Carrara on the floor and rough scraped plaster in a cooler shade of gray on the walls.

© Stefano Graziani

The façades are gray brick walls that exude the timeless and archaic air of an ancient ruin. They were designed to be self-supporting and monolithic, and their emphatic horizontality, with elongated bricks that are just four centimeters high, heightens their presence. The striking pattern of shadows cast by the alternately projecting and receding layers of brick amplifies this impression. Like the main building’s façades, those of the new building hint at classical architecture’s standard tripartite order of base, middle, and capital. This order is visualized through the brickwork’s different shades of gray as well as a frieze executed as a delicate relief.

© Stefano Graziani

The frieze, in its archetypal form, has always been part of the traditional architectural canon, but in the form it takes here it represents something quite new: sunk into the grooves of the frieze blocks are strips of LEDs that illuminate the hollows between the bricks, shedding an indirect light into the surrounding urban space. The result is a visually stimulating effect as the archaic-looking masonry begins to shine or, at a lower power setting, to glow.

© Stefano Graziani

Thus, while the new building does indeed speak the same language as its counterpart, the story it tells is a different and novel one. We understand it as neither a repetition nor a copy of the main building, but rather as an emphatically contemporary, forward-looking building capable of accommodating completely new forms of art and the engagement with it.

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Selected Wildlife

Yellow by Julian Rad – Wildlife Photography

5 Things I Learned As An Angry Introverted Individual

You’re reading 5 Things I Learned As An Angry, Introverted Individual, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’re enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

So I’m currently 30 years old and I’m an angry person. An introverted one at that. People around me may see me as weird, or even crazy considering the different things I do. Truly, I tend to isolate myself, especially when the anger feels overwhelming. It’s okay though. I don’t expect them to understand, and sometimes, that’s the way I like it. That’s the life of an introvert for you. We tend to look inwards more than anything. And we do it at our pace, in our own space. I wish I could say this article is going to be super inspiring and helpful, but it’s not. These are just observations of my own life. Hope it helps anyway. 1) Do things your own way, screw what others think I’ve honestly come to believe that anger management is complete bullshit. It does not help me. It makes me react to my anger too much. And it makes me feel like I’m in denial as it forces me to forgive my wrongdoers, something I am not ready to do. Or, most commonly, you’re taught to meditate (or whatever woo-woo technique) to calm down. None of that helped. What helped me the most? It was acknowledging that I am angry person and that I’ve accepted it. I will continue to be angry. Yes, you heard that right. I will continue to be angry, and that’s okay with me. Most will not understand it, but I don’t care anymore. After all, this is my life and I come up with the rules. Also, when you admit that you’ve a problem, it is easier on you and also a relief to accept who you are rather than constantly try to push it aside. Besides, I don’t act out in public. I never get in trouble, so I personally think I am doing alright. So go get it at your own pace. Do things your way. There’s no right or wrong for you unless you’re hurting yourself or others on an abusive level. Remember, you control the reins. 2) Isolation can be liberating This year, I made the decision to quit all of my Whatsapp groups. The groups consisted of a lot of my friends, some of whom I am even close to. But I left anyway. It was part of my endeavor to further my isolation. The average person would start to wonder why, as they talk about the benefits of being in chat groups. I just didn’t want to be one anymore. It kind of annoyed me that despite being in my own home, people have the power to be connected to me. And yes, some of these groups were toxic as they constantly gossiped non-stop. It was liberating to leave them, that much I can tell you. It was a form of power to me. Not many people would dare to leave a group like that because of logical reasons, hence fear of what others may think. Ignore the fear. Do what you want even if it seems minor or silly. Again, your life, your rules. If it’s minor and silly, then there’s no reason why it should have control over you. 3) Do not obey if you don’t want to I’ve reached a point in my life where I constantly ask myself, “Why should I obey?” Or “Why should I do the right thing here?” Because the followup is always, “I’m just going to be angry anyway.” I know that sounds cynical, but the thing is I’ve taken little steps to watch out for myself now. As I wrote about here before, being nice is not part of healing. Doing the right thing or merely being nice may not heal you at all. But of course, this isn’t to say you go into the end of the spectrum and actively be a jerk to hurt others. Just don’t say yes if you don’t want to. You can say no and reject people. You don’t have be nice all the time. Don’t even forgive if you don’t want to. Remember to be nice to yourself. Self-love is THAT important. 4) You can’t do nothing all day, so do the work For a while I took solace in simply lying in bed to do nothing. I’d either surf the net with my phone mindlessly or take a nap. But that only gave me a short burst of relief. Things like that can only help you so much and in the long run, it won’t do you any good. I also read that relying on a small rush of dopamine, from say, surfing porn would affect you negatively in the long run. That’s why you have to do the work. You need a sense of purpose. So be it your business or passion project, find the will to motivate yourself to do the work. You can’t ever be happy when you’re bored all the time. The boredom will eventually develop into something worse, like depression. 5) But sometimes, it is the human interaction that may be help you Recently, I did something totally out of the norm, which was going to help my mom out in her office. This was thoroughly different considering I’ve been working on business from home for years now. And I had a such a good time despite helping her with mundane tasks. It was there I interacted with her and also observed how she exchanged friendly banter with her neighbors. It wasn’t just a distraction from my emotional troubles, but it made me realize how a little bit of human relationship can help. For example, a simple joke told to you out of nowhere that made you laugh can make you feel good instantly. So it made me wonder: Could I be wrong? Am I too focused on myself and my problems? Could I need a complete change? Maybe yes. Maybe no. But as with life, too much of anything isn’t great. This applies to everyone, introvert or not. If you feel stuck with your problems, perhaps look around so you can get out there. Hope this article helps. Just for Pick The Brain readers Hey guys! Wanna be inspired even more? Doesn’t matter if you’re an introvert or not, this is for you. Get my free book. I’ll activate that happiness in you: 12 things happy people don’t give a f**k about! This free book only available through this link. Enjoy! Alden Tan is a passionate breakdancer and writer. He writes about honest and real self-improvement without the bullshit. Get his free book already!

You’ve read 5 Things I Learned As An Angry, Introverted Individual, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’ve enjoyed this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

http://ift.tt/1YIdqwZ

Misty byBørth Aadne Sætrenes http://ift.tt/20ZrPH5

via Sig Nordal, Jr. http://ift.tt/23KVYis

Bridal Veil Fall bySteve Bond http://ift.tt/1MJBRJR

via Sig Nordal, Jr. http://ift.tt/1MJDzea

Studio PROTOTYPE Design a Contemporary Home in Amsterdam

Villa Schoorl is a private residence designed by Studio PROTOTYPE. It is located in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Villa Schoorl by Studio PROTOTYPE: “At the leap of one of the most beautiful dune areas in our country you can find the small town called Schoorl. It has an almost surreal surrounding of peace, meadow, nature and a gorgeous view. This altogether being a piece of typical authentic Dutch landscape, of which..
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Osprey EJ fishing just missed by Margaret J Walker…

via flyfishing http://ift.tt/1Wf3ThR