Self-help books can be instructive, but stories are transformative. Sometimes I feel like the knowledge I collect merely floats in space, until the right story comes along and gives it a precise orbit. One such moment happened just a few months ago when I read The Karamazov Brothers. Such an incredible, life-changing book.
@@admypz I won't spoil anything in case you haven't read it, but I recognised parts of myself in a few different characters, and saw how some behaviours made me blind to other healthier, more constructive ways of living. I feel more balanced in my sense of self and how I relate to the world, and I am finding happiness even in life situations that used to cause me great pain. Of course it's not a magical book, but I seem to have read it at the right time in my journey for it to make something "click" somehow.
You just wonderfully worded how I've felt about the process of learning and applying concepts. So many times in my life I've "learned" something but only finally understood said thing after reading/seeing/experiencing it again or through a different means. Sometimes even if I've revisited a concept on and off for years. It''s crazy how much infornation we can take in on a daily basis without truly absorbing it, even when focused. I hope that made sense cause I've been up for almost 24 hrs straight and can't word for shit right now lol
I love a good self help book (I’m obsessed with Atomic Habits and Can’t Hurt Me) but I’ve also learned so many incredible lessons from fictional books as well 🙏🏽
there is some science to this. We learn best when we engage our five senses with a problem we face, make mistakes and succeed from our challenges. in books, movies, shows etc allows us to emulate the experiences/challenges of these fictional/non-fictional characters through their stories. In a way, the characters are teachers, by teaching through example. Well said Elizabeth
I think we read self-help books to engage with reality in a more fulfilling way, so perusing artistic endeavors is a a way of vicariously experiencing that as part of our program. It's like a loner reading fiction with social aspects to ease into a more gregarious lifestyle. It's all about balance. Self-help books give potentially helpful techniques, but is harmful if pursued obsessively to the exclusion of all else. It can lead to consuming self-help as a form of escape, rather than an aid to achieving your goals. Fiction adds to variety of life to prevent falling down that rabbit hole.
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She made a video about this! (How to Self Teach Efficiently) very interesting
similar to a Tedtalk about writing storytelling . Your readers do want to work with their meal subconsciously , and your job is to make them work with it. This is why in fiction you have to engage a lot of your senses than self help books that tells you straight what to do. Stories don't do that
Self help books are great, just choose one book to read per year, you don't have to read 20 books on self-help, that's not the point, knowing a new concept/philosophy from a self-help book, then having the time to apply it in real life, this is the goal!
self help is just problem solving to make your life better! i used to have to remind myself… stop the pity party, what is the real problem? or stop this analysis paralysis and just do something… anything to move forward so that you can reevaluate from a different perspective!
Tony Robbins is a good example of this. A lot has to do with his delivery. He's big, tall, and strong and has a powerful voice and people fall for it. (Just an example)
I feel that a well written novel with conflicted characters where I can follow their path through the difficulties of life often helps me more to understand struggles in my own life than an abstract self help book. While I have read a few excellent books that would probably qualify as self help, the majority of what I have seen / read in that field was mediocre at best.
That’s why vlogs and life-update videos are popular. I love watching them for the people I follow, like Ali or yourself. I think people want to *see* for themselves how their respiring virtual friends react to, handle or survive the day-to-day struggles.
That's true Sina! and we get to feel connected to the souls and humans who have something that is "a little similar to what we have", it could be their view of life or even the way they react when things happen...
After discovering your channel I've really come to appreciate the way you communicate your thoughts. I feel it strikes a very satisfying balance between the extremes I often see in feminine/masculine spaces where one side pushes "you are perfect just the way you are, you don't have to change a thing, everyone else are just blind to how amazing you are" while the other side pushes "you need to self immolate for success at all cost if not you'll become a loser" mentalities. I've gone through a lot of different self help sources and I agree with you that the best lessons come from stories rather than instructions. It can take some extra brainpower to extract the value and meaning from stories, but the lessons you learn yourself are often more applicable to your own situation than strict guidance.
Wow, truly mind opening! Maybe why I've been so down - relying on self-help books and therapy and inadvertently depriving myself of the arts. Watching this after your video on Naval and his point that the opposite of depression is play. It is a bit ironic giving this information critiquing self-help in a UA-cam self-help form 😅. But it works. Thank you!
I remember reading a book that actually hit me on a nerve. To make a long story short I was subjected to gaslightning in an earlier relationship. Whenever she got angry and slapped me and things, she said it was I who was the problem, I made her do it etc etc.... And at the end I started to believe her, I really was that asshole. Then many years after it was over I stumbled over a book about a person being subjected to the same sort of gaslightning. This person was living alone in a "pocket-universe" and had no recollection of who he was and how he got there. The only friend he had told him several times that he should not break out of that world and find something new. And if someone else was there, this new person is dangerous and should be avoided. This book was Piranesi by Susanne Clarke. And I remember reading it and feeling my heart race! And when I was done with it, tears was rolling down my cheeks and I felt so happy! (because of the ending)
GIRL this is such a good take on self-help vs. literature. I personally think both have great value. Literature indeed gives you more space to interpret life lessons yourself, whereas I do also really appreciate science-based self-help books that give practical tips based on scientific knowledge. But I loved how you gave tips for how you can use literature as a form of self-help.
I agree that both have value. I'm struck with the thought that, just like the challenge of finding a fictional book that resonates with you, it can be equally as challenging to find the RIGHT self-help book. Someone might try something that is great for the majority, but is really damaging to them specifically (due to undiagnosed conditions like ADHD, past trauma, etc). I think people who read fiction are more likely to say, ah, this isn't for me, and reach for something new. Someone seeking help in a selfhelp book may be more inclined to invest a certain amount of trust in the author and assume that their methods should definitely work for them.
I loved the thought that a part of healing is actually connecting with other people's experience of going through the same stuff, and that self-help books often really lack that, offering us just another way of alienation.
I read a lot of thrillers as I find them relatable (I've had a lot of bad happen) and the recurring theme that stands out for me is to trust my instincts/gut. It rarely leads a person wrong.
This video is the best Ode to Fiction Books! My brother who is a excellent reader once told me: "In the fiction books we can see the inner world of the characters, his/her thoughts, his/her conversation with him/herself, but this is almost never present in a movie", I agree with him. Interesting thought of yours: When you read fiction and analyse the character's thoughts you think of your own thoughts, it's a kind of meditation. I agree too.
i fell into that trap of self help because i read a lot of the most popular books, with a lot of life theories to try out. There was so much knowledge i could take action on that i never did because there was so much. i like the method of holding that thought and trying to implement before moving on to anything else
I was having the same idea when I later found out that I can actually learn and understand more from fiction books cause you kind of feel the character life along the side.. plus fiction books unlike self help books makes you remember the mistakes and the right ways of solving a problem more than just a dry explanation of a self help book:)
I really like self help books, there is nothing wrong with them. Reading so many self help books without implementing anything is just useless. 1 book can last you a year if used properly, you have to study it. Self help books just as well as fiction books can change your life and gave life changing advice, they are just written differently and people enjoy different things from one another.
I am opposite, and it might have to do with a combination of my age and my temperament - I care about direct, blunt and straight to the point and I don't care much for "story telling" any more. The most influential books for me were some accounting textbooks, business case studies, analog circuit design, and my year 2 electromagnetism textbook. I also like reading the "summaries" of books written by sales people (these are basically self help books, teaching you how to negotiate, how to improve confidence in situation of high uncertainty, tactics to deal with various stereotyped characters in business etc...). I also love listening to lectures of history professors explaining the people and circumstances that led to certain historical developments (eg. I regret reading War and Peace... it was more enjoyable to study specific non-dramatized circumstances and whatever evidence we have to support it). I love studying music theory and creating my own music...music is basically geometry for the ears because it's greatly grounded in math and biology. I enjoy lectures of data scientists designing AI and ML systems that can compose music for humans to enjoy. I also like reading the research reports of psychologists, then speak to audiences I have access to to validate the findings (this is the only time I enjoy stories, when i hear them directly from real people, because I can feel their emotions). Fiction isn't completely off the radar for me, and I might return to it some day if my views on fiction change. But generally, I prefer direct, blunt, dry facts over any statements that are too open to interpretation. If you have something to say, then say it. Don't fluff it up. By keeping things as simple and as direct as possible, you make it easier for people of other cultures to access the same information. Societies around the world can learn so much from each other, so if we keep our information as plain and direct as possible, it greatly increases the ease of access. Again, this is my personal preference, so everyone is different! Keep it direct and factual for greater accessibility and retention!
"We may go with not connecting things always with other's experiences and find out ourselves." Probably the best and boldest sentences. Thank you so very much for saying so.
I truly admire your idea. As a student of English Literature I love the stories we read, learn, and the historical periods we go through. Even though they're lovable, to me, I found it difficult to utilise them in my life. However, I have been one of those who hated self-help books and seminars anything that popularity and see no obvious change in them I just feel negative feelings toward them. By days I found myself in the quest for those books, yes they gave great feeling, teach a lot, and you gain great vision, but we still struggle again how to apply them to our personal lives. Later, I've been guided to consciousness and spiritual books and oh goodness, they break the puzzly finally. Thank God now I got CLARITY! Yes, Unfotunalty, most self-help books are filled with the same ideas, yet, the same thing can happen with non-fictional books, I think this is could happen with all categories! What I think, fictional, non-fictional, self-help, consciousness, spiritual, literature, and poetry, all provide a GREAT knowledge for oneself which in turn affects humanity, we need them all. However, still, a personal choice what to take what not to, what is suitable for a certain stage ...etc I am thankful for all those sitting down the summing up their knowledge, experience, visions, behind the scenes of their achievements, their deepest pain, and feelings, ... etc in papers, that's magnificent, I'm sure every single book has its readership. nowadays we're blessed there're tens of ways in which a person can choose the book that serves them well or tackle the issue they're in, it's never a problem anymore. There're tens of good books on the market nowadays, I love the fact of being curious to know and find out more and more. I would love to be an open person to all books and knowledge that we're blessed with in our time.
The novels of Jane Austen have always been a masterclass in human psychology and relationships, far superior to any analogous self-help books on the subject.
I think the real key is that you need both. It's not enough to learn rules, you need to be able to apply them to experiences, or stories. But also it's not enough to mindlessly enjoy stories without working hard to extract lessons from them.
Every video of yours gives me a new perspective and helps me look at things differently and that, makes my life so much better and gives me a greater idea of the world around me. Thank you
Oh self help would be the shortcut and fiction would be the more meaningful (growth-fostering) path. I'd never seen it like that! Thank you for another thought-provoking video 🤩
People are different, and its nice to know how you view it. For some self help works, others love fiction, or arts etc. And you talk so fast! lol, It really shows that there's a lot you want to share! Keep it coming.
Out of all the books on money I've read, the one I've gotten the most wisdom from was "The Richest Man of Babylon". It was stories of money wisdom. The "story" is essential for human growth. This is something that Peterson brings up constantly. Excellent work.
Elizabeth this is the BEST video i've ever seen, i've been stuck in a horribleeee slump for years and turn to self help for a lot of things and this video really chnaged my perspective and i feel so hopeful about things now seriously LOVEE your videos love you you are amazing keep going girlllll❤❤❤❤
Im like,, rlly inspired from your videos. One thing I like about you is that you help others by sharing and encouraging different and genuine perspectives. I learn a lot from you, so thank you
For me it's better when I see my fictional character dealing with different challenges in his life then just do this and don't do that, like in self-help books.
I've always shared your opinion that fiction is as good or BETTER than self-help books, but I've never heard anyone put it quite so well! I'm immediately hooked on your channel. Who does your editing? This was outstanding
Not all self help books show the actual work we need to put in, I think we all have enough information right now and all we need is doing the work, I am feeling enthusiastic to join such community of thinkers to share our ideas and opinions! I liked when she wrote "professional advice receiver" hhhhh THIS IS ME!
every detail here, from each opinion to your speed talking, is exactly similar to me. I am more than glad at least someone in the world showed me that some people are born to reality and have the ability of recognition of beautiful things that that are so little and so undermined. thankyou
I love this topic! I started reading for fun again around 2017 but all I read were non-fiction. This year, I had a goal to read more books. I picked up the book The Women of Chateau Lafayette, and i fell in love. Learning through stories and detail. I love how poetic it can be. I actually get a lot of value from the art rather than a lecture.
Couldn't agree more. This is actually the beauty of fictional books that everyone can relate to them in their own way. Nothing can be more helpful than your own thoughts.
I love this take because there's so many more entertaining fiction books that I've enjoyed but also missed out on reading by consuming self-help books, and we've learned since we where kids y'know that every story has a lesson and there's infinite amounts more of them then in self-help books along with just useful realizations about the world
Oh, this video was validation! I always soldier through self-help books expecting to find some treasure or sometimes to keep up with others. But in a way, all my book wisdom comes from the classics. I feel like my brain is being massaged by literary beauty while so much layered abstract information is being loaded into it that I can decipher in a lifetime. Thank you for being Elizabeth Filiips and talking to a camera.
i believe this is also why advertisements are focused on promoting their product through creating a fantasy and making the viewer feel good emotions. If they simply talked about facts and focused on giving information without a story behind it, it wouldn't be as effective. We get more out of fiction books to help ourselves because when we are watching a movie, or reading a book, we put ourselves in the shoes of the main character, the protagonist, so we react as the situations are happening directly to us, thus feel intense emotions to whatever is happening to the protagonist. That can mean that we learn more through reading fictional stories also because we put ourselves in their shoes and take lessons in the end. this video was so useful, thank you!
Every time I read Science fiction specially on Space" I found that solving problem after another. The struggle of characters and their determination on leave behind the first problem and go to the next situation. And something similar on "Journey to the center of the earth" if they didn't trust in the situation, maybe they'd never get out. I still read something like Stoicism but I understand on your topic 100%. Waiting for your own book Liz. Have a blast.
journey to the center of the earth is my favorite book jules verne and it is so beautiful. At the time, i just read cover to cover and never have I forgotten it. It stand out to me among all others of his. It was beautiful.
I was so amazed by you that I wanted to leave a comment too! I adore the way you articulate your thoughts. I love they way you speak and think. I can relate myself to your thoughts and feelings. I came across your channel by chance and I loved it from the very first phrases I heard. I also want to say that I love your paintings and I can't wait to see more. Keep up with posting videos. They are very inspiring for me ❤
You have the gift of being so usefully different. A so practical originality. And you have the self belief to say what you know, deep inside you, is true. You couldn't not be impressive. And you are. Very!
thank you Elizabeth for this beautiful method. I never really looked at fictional books this way, I mean I just enjoyed them as a separate realm and journey, and it ends as soon as I finish the last sentence of a work. Thank you.
Maybe we all go through an 'insight addiction' phase, which is an interesting time in our lives but once you realise that 99 out of 100 self-help books will make no difference, it's kind of deflating. 'Think & Grow Rich' and 'How To Win Friends & Influence People' and a few other classics are maybe the exception to the rule but I now agree with what you are saying. It's only taken me 44 years and this video of yours to work this out. We do learn better when all of our senses are turned on.
Good evening Elizabeth. Thanks a lot for your awesome videos and newsletters. I especially love your way of seeing how to learn and the fact that you share it the way you do. It’s very inspiring to me. I don’t know if it’s because I’m french or because, as you speak, I need myself to think about it too, but I sometimes slow down your videos or just listen to them a second time. 😋 Have a wonderful end of the week☺️
I was really happy when Lonely Island released their "YOLO" song. Because it shows how random and stupid and most of all hollow "You only live once" really is: It is not at all consequential to start consuming and dancing and party because your life-span is limited. The fact that your life is short can just as well mean that you should not actively contribute to making it even shorter. And there is a huge gray area between being caught in self-optimization and staying healthy and somewhat organized.
You pointed out some great arguments for your stand. It’s true that analyzing a fiction book to come up with our own conclusion creates more meaningful life lessons than those that are readily given to us. It’s also one of the reasons why I love sci-Fi tv shows and movies. I am always amazed by how the writers present an accurate and profound description of human nature and their prospective reactions to a certain situation. Sci-Fi can be a great source of lessons for what could happen in the future, and how to live in the moment in order to maximize our chance of survival later on in life. We can learn about the characters thought processes, and we can also find ourselves in some of them, learned from their mistakes, and relate to other people who are different from us with much more compassion. I totally agree with your argument. But both self-help and fictions have their benefits. Self-help books could be a quick boost to restore the mind and spirit in moment of distress, while fiction/sci-Fi, could be the perfect resources to bolster our critical thinking ability, and find a sense of comfort and creativity in someone else’s imagination or life experience.
Random UA-cam suggestion, but I'm glad I've watched this😃. I completely agree with you, I feel like I learn more about myself and other people in reading a fiction book than from a self-help one. A fiction book is much more fun to read and I can get inspired by a character as opposed to reading a dull text, that is mostly based on lies (like `I was poor and ill at some young age, but all of a sudden I realized I had to change and all of a sudden I became strong willed out of thin air` etc.). And the first chapter in all self help books says in many words that `this book is the solution to all your problems` followed by the appeal to greed. So I don't usually read self help books 😁. But I appreciate non fiction books based on science and a genuine pursuit of truth, my favorite non fiction authors being Sam Harris and Robert Sapolsky. That being said, I am a fantasy reader. I especially love Joe Abercrombie's and Michael R. Fletcher's work. Their novels are such a complex dive into the human psychology. I highly recommend anyone reading their books. The First Law especially, Glokta might be the best written character in all literature. Quotes that would be very dry in a non fiction book are so much powerful and inspiring when reading the stories of Logen Ninefingers or Sand dan Glokta: `Once you've got a task to do, it's better to do it than live with the fear of it` or ` we must work with the tools we have`. P.S. I had to listen at 0.75 speed, lol.
Thank you so much for this well formulated concept! It is what I felt but could nor formulate. When I read fiction it really transforms me, when I see art it affects me much harder than any self help book.
I feel silly for not considering the fact that I do learn from character driven fiction stories!! I’m obsessed with watching films. Especially as someone who grew up in a small town and wasn’t allowed to leave the house… I felt like I was only able to learn about the “real world” through watching movies and tv. I would love to read more fiction though it’s harder to find stuff that sounds interesting as an adult. I have over a hundred nonfiction recommendations but seldom am recommended good fiction. I will try and find some book recs on your website! Thank you for the insightful videos.
ohhh boy I always knew that we'd have a really great tipsy conversation if we ever met in a pub, but these are literally all my opinions! give them back!
This really transformed how I view the self-help genre! As you said, there are so many things that don't really hit home until we experience them ourselves or watch others go through them. Do you have any recommendations for good fiction books for a meaningful impact?
I love reading science fiction and fantasy. I really recommend Elizabeth's favourite Time Enough for Love - also my favourite 😄 Written by R.A. Heinlen. Also basically anything from Neil Gaiman. And Terry Pratchett. His early books are more fun but later on he started to make it also more thoughtful.
I recommend you Jane Eyre it's a very beautiful novel along side I also recommend you 1984 and animal farm both are from George Orwell and trust me they worth reading ;)
Self-help books- Catchy title; tons spent on marketing; 30-40 pages that are a mix of the author's life story and promises about the type of awesome life you're going to have because of this book. Followed by page after page of word count fluff peppered with the occasional piece of semi-decent advice. Philosophy and literature- Look what they need to mimic a fraction of our power!
Great thoughts I remembered myself when I didn’t know about self help, I enjoyed life in a different way But I also have to admit that self help taught me various different important life concepts which I wouldn’t be able to grasp from books
The first 30 seconds was incredibly aesthetic and engaging. I too have learned a lot about from myself from reading fiction. The lines I highlight in books are related to self-improvement and human nature. Self-help books ARE a scam. Thank you for saying it. Loved your take in this topic, Liz!
I am really happy I accidentally found you. A lot of your points are things I either discovered myself or find very useful and worth thinking about. This video is the prime example of the first. I have never learned so many things about how to live my life from dry how-tos like I did from stories. 'Humans learn best from stories' is one of my personal core beliefs. I love to read fiction and do deep-dives into the psychology of the characters and dynamics between them and the setting. I love to write them and explore by doing that, too. I learned more from works of Neil Gaiman than I would ever learn from twice the amount of self-help books. A.E.Marling's fiction paints such beautiful pictures with words and shows such interesting sides of his characters, that his books tilt one's perception of reality more towards wonder just by realizing how differently things in general can be viewed by other people. Even Malcolm Gladwell, who's books aren't fiction, still is one of the best sources of interesting thoughts to me because he, too, talks in stories, shows things in contexts and characters and relationships. To be absolutely honest, I managed to significantly improve my life by pondering an insight I got from a very well written Fanfiction based on a TV series. I think that when the story is well done and the reader has open, inquisitive mind, any literature can be enriching. Neil Gaiman says in his Masterclass that one of the central tools of literature is using the 'lie' of a made-up story to tell a human truth. I think that is very much true. The way you work with books of fiction is similar to mine and I love that you do it. I feel less alone and I feel hope I can learn more useful things from you. (I certainly already did.) Or just hang around and listen to you saying interesting things (though I have to slow you down to 0.8 speed :D ). Thank you for existing. ❤ You are very intelligent, interesting woman and I am frankly impressed by all of what I have seen from your videos so far. Also, my deepest respect for studying medicine, I think teachers and doctors/medical staff (or their cultural equivalents) are two pillars of any civilization. (You are also very pretty. :) Not that it's very important, but why not praise you for more of the good things you possess?)
this was so good! thank you for making the case for fiction books. White teeth by zadie smith is one of my favourite books and it has so many important life lessons in it. it is also a great book for 'wait, do I wanna live my life like these people?' much easier to internalise a lesson if it is tied to emotions. btw, I love your editing style, and the fact that your videos are short
Doing art in whatever form, level helps a lot with anxiety, depression. I think books are a part of that. The issue is that we normally spend a lot of tie in things that are needed but don't feed our soul, to say it in a way. It is hard to find the space... and also to not be so auto critic.
In my life I have read a lot of both. There's truth to fiction being effective, especially good one as I feel it almost counts as own experience. People mostly learn through own experience and it's the most natural way. The case against fiction is that there could be element of exactly that - fiction. Often it shows you things you wish would happen and dynamics that don't come very often in real life. there's nothing more dangerous than fiction that closely imitates life but doesn't really correspond to reality (learned this the hard way). As for self help it requires additional work and for lots of it you need to find ways in which these things are applicable and some of them may not even be for you. In it's worse forms if could be ineffective or even very biased towards writers worldwiew (especially religious beliefs) or misleading. There is no easy answer so this is why I stick to both. :)
Self-help books have helped me tremendously. The thing is you have to be active. When you read a self-help book, you have to apply what you've read or it isn't going to work. Similarly if you read fiction passively for entertainment, you're not going to learn anything about life from it either. You have to be an active reader and make connections, pause to think, ask questions and try to answer them, etc. Many people read self-help and don't apply any of it and therefore are not helped. And many people read and read and read fiction and their life never changes because they weren't really thinking. Especially in this social media book community where people just want to make sure they read as many books as possible and don't really savor anything.
The issue is, not everyone is capable of ( or perhaps have sufficient time to spend on) conducting deeper analysis into fiction books to derive these lessons by themselves. Furthermore, it's dependent on the types of fiction books a person likes to read as well ( some people treat fiction as an escape and therefore may be disinclined to select 'deep' books, not to mention the quality of the authors - definitely should not be taking life lessons from some of the authors out there lol). So, for some, self help books that lay everything out cut and dry will be more beneficial. Therefore I take issue with the title of this video, but I understand why it is written the way it is. :). Love you videos and looking forward to the next one! TC
I love Liz’s content😭 How’s there no copyright issues tho since she uses so many vids from other creators? Is there copyright free vids like music as well?
Loved this vid and how you presented it, although I have one suggestion: do you mind slowing down and pausing now and then when you speak? It takes some time for me to process what is being said in general, even with complex topics. Again loved the video, just those two I would suggest you can do
@@devilsolution9781 ya but suppose you're doing a presentation for something and you rush it. You might be on the same topic, but it's unlikely that your audience would fully process what you said
Fiction books isn't my favorite type and didn't read alot of them because i always taught that they are such a wasting of time , but i think my view changed after this video. Thank you Lizzy ❤️
My gods, I love the way you think. I’ve always found a more salient form of self help in fiction than I have in the usual self help book. There were some I liked, but never finished. But I’ve almost always finished a good fiction book-especially if it’s helped me gain new perspectives or to make more sense of the world around me.
Great content! I really appreciate your point of view on this. I have spent many hours consuming content in the self-help/personal development space, much of which has been very insightful, practical, and applicable. From my perspective, a person Googling anything in this space begins with "how to" which by its nature is kinda dry, direct, clinical, etc. For me, that type of presentation works well. I saw another video of yours describing your approach to studying MS... if memory serves me. In that you go on to tell us how you must create a story or use an existing story around it, in a way anchoring it to memory, making it easier to tap into. To me you seem to be a creative and very much a romantic. No shade thrown, but I am commenting because your approach to this space is very unique, very intriguing for me. I have not thought to give sh/pd content a narrative, a fictional account, to personalize it. I kinda have always taken the lessons at face value. But this is refreshing. Again, thank you for your perspective on this.
🧠 My link will get you 10% off on Hover: www.hover.com/elizabeth Good luck with what you're using it for! ❤
I have a fictional book for you to enjoy my dear Elizabeth. The Divine Crusade Against America 🇺🇸 its only 7 pounds. Enjoy!
Thanks
Read Robert Greene self-help book my mentor
Thete isn't a self to help
l live
your greatest talent, is being able to speak in 1.5x UA-cam speed without me speeding up the video
Now I have to watch her in x0.75 as a not-native speaker haha
lol!
I was about to comment that!!! I think she uploads at that speed... Actually talking that fast would be craaaazy
I wish she would be speaking more slowly
She’s just stumbled upon her British accent.
Self-help books can be instructive, but stories are transformative. Sometimes I feel like the knowledge I collect merely floats in space, until the right story comes along and gives it a precise orbit. One such moment happened just a few months ago when I read The Karamazov Brothers. Such an incredible, life-changing book.
how did it change you?
@@admypz I won't spoil anything in case you haven't read it, but I recognised parts of myself in a few different characters, and saw how some behaviours made me blind to other healthier, more constructive ways of living. I feel more balanced in my sense of self and how I relate to the world, and I am finding happiness even in life situations that used to cause me great pain. Of course it's not a magical book, but I seem to have read it at the right time in my journey for it to make something "click" somehow.
You just wonderfully worded how I've felt about the process of learning and applying concepts. So many times in my life I've "learned" something but only finally understood said thing after reading/seeing/experiencing it again or through a different means. Sometimes even if I've revisited a concept on and off for years. It''s crazy how much infornation we can take in on a daily basis without truly absorbing it, even when focused.
I hope that made sense cause I've been up for almost 24 hrs straight and can't word for shit right now lol
It is indeed The Magical Book.
And crime and punishment too.
Excellent way of putting it
Instructive vs transformative
I love a good self help book (I’m obsessed with Atomic Habits and Can’t Hurt Me) but I’ve also learned so many incredible lessons from fictional books as well 🙏🏽
I love atomic habits. I made a vlog in my channel i was reading it
i'm reading Atomic Habits right now 😁
Can`t Hurt Me is so good.
Yes fr, i havent read any other books that are so good as these two! Totally obsessed.
Hey I am reading atomic habits currently and I love it! Can you recommend me some that I might like and are worth reading?
there is some science to this. We learn best when we engage our five senses with a problem we face, make mistakes and succeed from our challenges. in books, movies, shows etc allows us to emulate the experiences/challenges of these fictional/non-fictional characters through their stories. In a way, the characters are teachers, by teaching through example. Well said Elizabeth
I think we read self-help books to engage with reality in a more fulfilling way, so perusing artistic endeavors is a a way of vicariously experiencing that as part of our program. It's like a loner reading fiction with social aspects to ease into a more gregarious lifestyle. It's all about balance. Self-help books give potentially helpful techniques, but is harmful if pursued obsessively to the exclusion of all else. It can lead to consuming self-help as a form of escape, rather than an aid to achieving your goals. Fiction adds to variety of life to prevent falling down that rabbit hole.
She made a video about this! (How to Self Teach Efficiently) very interesting
similar to a Tedtalk about writing storytelling . Your readers do want to work with their meal subconsciously , and your job is to make them work with it. This is why in fiction you have to engage a lot of your senses than self help books that tells you straight what to do. Stories don't do that
Self help books are great, just choose one book to read per year, you don't have to read 20 books on self-help, that's not the point, knowing a new concept/philosophy from a self-help book, then having the time to apply it in real life, this is the goal!
That is a very valid and true opinion, thanks for sharing!
@@hasanh.s5381 you're welcome!
True
very valid opinion, sometimes if you read too much these kind of books it makes you forget the lesson of the previous books
Just make sure it isn't from jordan peterson and you're on the right track 👍
I guess self-help as a concept is good and geniune but when it comes to the the self-help industry then all you find is people selling snake oil..
Exactly!
lmao
Tony Robbins expensive snake - oil.
self help is just problem solving to make your life better!
i used to have to remind myself… stop the pity party, what is the real problem?
or stop this analysis paralysis and just do something… anything to move forward so that you can reevaluate from a different perspective!
Tony Robbins is a good example of this. A lot has to do with his delivery. He's big, tall, and strong and has a powerful voice and people fall for it. (Just an example)
I feel that a well written novel with conflicted characters where I can follow their path through the difficulties of life often helps me more to understand struggles in my own life than an abstract self help book. While I have read a few excellent books that would probably qualify as self help, the majority of what I have seen / read in that field was mediocre at best.
Hey, any suggestions for those kinds of novels?
This is exactly what neuroscience says. Reading fiction=increased empathy and problem solving.
@@vaibhavi.singh.War and Peace is an enjoyable journey through the lives of several characters. Don't mind the length, that is a bonus.
@@SolracCAP thanks I've been putting it off for so long, might as well try it this year
That’s why vlogs and life-update videos are popular. I love watching them for the people I follow, like Ali or yourself. I think people want to *see* for themselves how their respiring virtual friends react to, handle or survive the day-to-day struggles.
That's true Sina! and we get to feel connected to the souls and humans who have something that is "a little similar to what we have", it could be their view of life or even the way they react when things happen...
After discovering your channel I've really come to appreciate the way you communicate your thoughts. I feel it strikes a very satisfying balance between the extremes I often see in feminine/masculine spaces where one side pushes "you are perfect just the way you are, you don't have to change a thing, everyone else are just blind to how amazing you are" while the other side pushes "you need to self immolate for success at all cost if not you'll become a loser" mentalities.
I've gone through a lot of different self help sources and I agree with you that the best lessons come from stories rather than instructions. It can take some extra brainpower to extract the value and meaning from stories, but the lessons you learn yourself are often more applicable to your own situation than strict guidance.
So well spoken.
Self Immolate.
Wow, truly mind opening! Maybe why I've been so down - relying on self-help books and therapy and inadvertently depriving myself of the arts. Watching this after your video on Naval and his point that the opposite of depression is play.
It is a bit ironic giving this information critiquing self-help in a UA-cam self-help form 😅. But it works. Thank you!
I remember reading a book that actually hit me on a nerve. To make a long story short I was subjected to gaslightning in an earlier relationship. Whenever she got angry and slapped me and things, she said it was I who was the problem, I made her do it etc etc.... And at the end I started to believe her, I really was that asshole.
Then many years after it was over I stumbled over a book about a person being subjected to the same sort of gaslightning. This person was living alone in a "pocket-universe" and had no recollection of who he was and how he got there. The only friend he had told him several times that he should not break out of that world and find something new. And if someone else was there, this new person is dangerous and should be avoided.
This book was Piranesi by Susanne Clarke. And I remember reading it and feeling my heart race! And when I was done with it, tears was rolling down my cheeks and I felt so happy! (because of the ending)
Amazing! Thanks for sharing--and welcome to the whole wide world!
GIRL this is such a good take on self-help vs. literature. I personally think both have great value. Literature indeed gives you more space to interpret life lessons yourself, whereas I do also really appreciate science-based self-help books that give practical tips based on scientific knowledge. But I loved how you gave tips for how you can use literature as a form of self-help.
I agree that both have value. I'm struck with the thought that, just like the challenge of finding a fictional book that resonates with you, it can be equally as challenging to find the RIGHT self-help book. Someone might try something that is great for the majority, but is really damaging to them specifically (due to undiagnosed conditions like ADHD, past trauma, etc). I think people who read fiction are more likely to say, ah, this isn't for me, and reach for something new. Someone seeking help in a selfhelp book may be more inclined to invest a certain amount of trust in the author and assume that their methods should definitely work for them.
I loved the thought that a part of healing is actually connecting with other people's experience of going through the same stuff, and that self-help books often really lack that, offering us just another way of alienation.
I read a lot of thrillers as I find them relatable (I've had a lot of bad happen) and the recurring theme that stands out for me is to trust my instincts/gut. It rarely leads a person wrong.
This video is the best Ode to Fiction Books!
My brother who is a excellent reader once told me: "In the fiction books we can see the inner world of the characters, his/her thoughts, his/her conversation with him/herself, but this is almost never present in a movie", I agree with him.
Interesting thought of yours: When you read fiction and analyse the character's thoughts you think of your own thoughts, it's a kind of meditation. I agree too.
This is one of the reasons why I feel like there is gold in fiction. Great points Elizabeth, keep it up!
This video should have more views. It's spot on. Also it inspired me as an artist because it reminded that art is useful. Thank you.
i fell into that trap of self help because i read a lot of the most popular books, with a lot of life theories to try out. There was so much knowledge i could take action on that i never did because there was so much. i like the method of holding that thought and trying to implement before moving on to anything else
I was having the same idea when I later found out that I can actually learn and understand more from fiction books cause you kind of feel the character life along the side..
plus fiction books unlike self help books makes you remember the mistakes and the right ways of solving a problem more than just a dry explanation of a self help book:)
I really like self help books, there is nothing wrong with them. Reading so many self help books without implementing anything is just useless. 1 book can last you a year if used properly, you have to study it. Self help books just as well as fiction books can change your life and gave life changing advice, they are just written differently and people enjoy different things from one another.
I am opposite, and it might have to do with a combination of my age and my temperament - I care about direct, blunt and straight to the point and I don't care much for "story telling" any more. The most influential books for me were some accounting textbooks, business case studies, analog circuit design, and my year 2 electromagnetism textbook. I also like reading the "summaries" of books written by sales people (these are basically self help books, teaching you how to negotiate, how to improve confidence in situation of high uncertainty, tactics to deal with various stereotyped characters in business etc...). I also love listening to lectures of history professors explaining the people and circumstances that led to certain historical developments (eg. I regret reading War and Peace... it was more enjoyable to study specific non-dramatized circumstances and whatever evidence we have to support it). I love studying music theory and creating my own music...music is basically geometry for the ears because it's greatly grounded in math and biology. I enjoy lectures of data scientists designing AI and ML systems that can compose music for humans to enjoy. I also like reading the research reports of psychologists, then speak to audiences I have access to to validate the findings (this is the only time I enjoy stories, when i hear them directly from real people, because I can feel their emotions).
Fiction isn't completely off the radar for me, and I might return to it some day if my views on fiction change. But generally, I prefer direct, blunt, dry facts over any statements that are too open to interpretation. If you have something to say, then say it. Don't fluff it up. By keeping things as simple and as direct as possible, you make it easier for people of other cultures to access the same information. Societies around the world can learn so much from each other, so if we keep our information as plain and direct as possible, it greatly increases the ease of access.
Again, this is my personal preference, so everyone is different! Keep it direct and factual for greater accessibility and retention!
That intro is amazing!!! On to watching the rest of the video
"We may go with not connecting things always with other's experiences and find out ourselves." Probably the best and boldest sentences. Thank you so very much for saying so.
I truly admire your idea. As a student of English Literature I love the stories we read, learn, and the historical periods we go through. Even though they're lovable, to me, I found it difficult to utilise them in my life. However, I have been one of those who hated self-help books and seminars anything that popularity and see no obvious change in them I just feel negative feelings toward them. By days I found myself in the quest for those books, yes they gave great feeling, teach a lot, and you gain great vision, but we still struggle again how to apply them to our personal lives.
Later, I've been guided to consciousness and spiritual books and oh goodness, they break the puzzly finally. Thank God now I got CLARITY!
Yes, Unfotunalty, most self-help books are filled with the same ideas, yet, the same thing can happen with non-fictional books, I think this is could happen with all categories!
What I think, fictional, non-fictional, self-help, consciousness, spiritual, literature, and poetry, all provide a GREAT knowledge for oneself which in turn affects humanity, we need them all. However, still, a personal choice what to take what not to, what is suitable for a certain stage ...etc
I am thankful for all those sitting down the summing up their knowledge, experience, visions, behind the scenes of their achievements, their deepest pain, and feelings, ... etc in papers, that's magnificent, I'm sure every single book has its readership.
nowadays we're blessed there're tens of ways in which a person can choose the book that serves them well or tackle the issue they're in, it's never a problem anymore.
There're tens of good books on the market nowadays, I love the fact of being curious to know and find out more and more. I would love to be an open person to all books and knowledge that we're blessed with in our time.
Reading some old literature fiction can be really enlightening. Many lessons can be learned from those books and, besides, you get tons of fun.
The novels of Jane Austen have always been a masterclass in human psychology and relationships, far superior to any analogous self-help books on the subject.
agreed! persuasion is my favorite
She originally wanted to write off-color novels.
I think the real key is that you need both. It's not enough to learn rules, you need to be able to apply them to experiences, or stories. But also it's not enough to mindlessly enjoy stories without working hard to extract lessons from them.
Every video of yours gives me a new perspective and helps me look at things differently and that, makes my life so much better and gives me a greater idea of the world around me. Thank you
And that 1.5x speed and now i can adjust it to -0.5x
Spent the whole morning watching your videos one by one. Love you so much! Feel like you are just an extraverted version of myself ❤
Oh self help would be the shortcut and fiction would be the more meaningful (growth-fostering) path. I'd never seen it like that!
Thank you for another thought-provoking video 🤩
Stop thanking people, go out and do, you will adjust accordingly. The entire world is either cursing or complementing but they are not doing.
@@bluwng 🤔
People are different, and its nice to know how you view it. For some self help works, others love fiction, or arts etc. And you talk so fast! lol, It really shows that there's a lot you want to share! Keep it coming.
Out of all the books on money I've read, the one I've gotten the most wisdom from was "The Richest Man of Babylon". It was stories of money wisdom. The "story" is essential for human growth. This is something that Peterson brings up constantly.
Excellent work.
kind of ironic however that Wikipedia Lists as a self help book ;-)
thank you for the book recommendation! reading it so far has been more digestible than a textbook
Peterson is a good man and not like how the media TDSs the public into viewing him. that and Wikipedia is damage control for the WEF.
Really? I haven't heard Jordan Peterson talk about _The Richest Man in Babylon_
It's a great book, though. Kinda reminds me of _The Alchemist_
Elizabeth this is the BEST video i've ever seen, i've been stuck in a horribleeee slump for years and turn to self help for a lot of things and this video really chnaged my perspective and i feel so hopeful about things now seriously LOVEE your videos love you you are amazing keep going girlllll❤❤❤❤
Im like,, rlly inspired from your videos. One thing I like about you is that you help others by sharing and encouraging different and genuine perspectives. I learn a lot from you, so thank you
I don’t know where was your channel hidden.
I am addicted. Thank you.
For me it's better when I see my fictional character dealing with different challenges in his life then just do this and don't do that, like in self-help books.
Elizabeth, your editing is getting/keeps getting so amazing!!🤩 Thank you for your refreshing perspective🌸
I've always shared your opinion that fiction is as good or BETTER than self-help books, but I've never heard anyone put it quite so well! I'm immediately hooked on your channel. Who does your editing? This was outstanding
Not all self help books show the actual work we need to put in, I think we all have enough information right now and all we need is doing the work, I am feeling enthusiastic to join such community of thinkers to share our ideas and opinions! I liked when she wrote "professional advice receiver" hhhhh THIS IS ME!
"we all have enough information right now and and all we need is doing the work." Felt that
every detail here, from each opinion to your speed talking, is exactly similar to me. I am more than glad at least someone in the world showed me that some people are born to reality and have the ability of recognition of beautiful things that that are so little and so undermined. thankyou
I love this topic! I started reading for fun again around 2017 but all I read were non-fiction. This year, I had a goal to read more books. I picked up the book The Women of Chateau Lafayette, and i fell in love. Learning through stories and detail. I love how poetic it can be. I actually get a lot of value from the art rather than a lecture.
Couldn't agree more. This is actually the beauty of fictional books that everyone can relate to them in their own way. Nothing can be more helpful than your own thoughts.
I love this take because there's so many more entertaining fiction books that I've enjoyed but also missed out on reading by consuming self-help books, and we've learned since we where kids y'know that every story has a lesson and there's infinite amounts more of them then in self-help books along with just useful realizations about the world
At first I thought I played the video at 1.5x but no! Girl, you talk so fast and so clear!! Wow, amazing
i checked twice.
Oh, this video was validation! I always soldier through self-help books expecting to find some treasure or sometimes to keep up with others. But in a way, all my book wisdom comes from the classics. I feel like my brain is being massaged by literary beauty while so much layered abstract information is being loaded into it that I can decipher in a lifetime.
Thank you for being Elizabeth Filiips and talking to a camera.
i believe this is also why advertisements are focused on promoting their product through creating a fantasy and making the viewer feel good emotions. If they simply talked about facts and focused on giving information without a story behind it, it wouldn't be as effective. We get more out of fiction books to help ourselves because when we are watching a movie, or reading a book, we put ourselves in the shoes of the main character, the protagonist, so we react as the situations are happening directly to us, thus feel intense emotions to whatever is happening to the protagonist. That can mean that we learn more through reading fictional stories also because we put ourselves in their shoes and take lessons in the end.
this video was so useful, thank you!
Every time I read Science fiction specially on Space" I found that solving problem after another. The struggle of characters and their determination on leave behind the first problem and go to the next situation. And something similar on "Journey to the center of the earth" if they didn't trust in the situation, maybe they'd never get out. I still read something like Stoicism but I understand on your topic 100%. Waiting for your own book Liz. Have a blast.
journey to the center of the earth is my favorite book jules verne and it is so beautiful. At the time, i just read cover to cover and never have I forgotten it. It stand out to me among all others of his. It was beautiful.
Listening to you it’s like hearing my thoughts and experiences out loud and organized! Amazing job!🎉
I’m just really impressed of how fast you speak
The editing of this video is superb!!! Liz you did so well!!
I was so amazed by you that I wanted to leave a comment too! I adore the way you articulate your thoughts. I love they way you speak and think. I can relate myself to your thoughts and feelings. I came across your channel by chance and I loved it from the very first phrases I heard. I also want to say that I love your paintings and I can't wait to see more. Keep up with posting videos. They are very inspiring for me ❤
You have the gift of being so usefully different. A so practical originality. And you have the self belief to say what you know, deep inside you, is true. You couldn't not be impressive.
And you are. Very!
thank you Elizabeth for this beautiful method. I never really looked at fictional books this way, I mean I just enjoyed them as a separate realm and journey, and it ends as soon as I finish the last sentence of a work.
Thank you.
Just look how lively Elizabeth looks in the video, she really looks genuine!
Maybe we all go through an 'insight addiction' phase, which is an interesting time in our lives but once you realise that 99 out of 100 self-help books will make no difference, it's kind of deflating. 'Think & Grow Rich' and 'How To Win Friends & Influence People' and a few other classics are maybe the exception to the rule but I now agree with what you are saying. It's only taken me 44 years and this video of yours to work this out. We do learn better when all of our senses are turned on.
Thank you for getting me back into reading fiction, guilt free. It had always made me happy and reinvigorated.
You speak fast enough that i dont need to increase the speed.Really impressive!🙌🏻
Good evening Elizabeth.
Thanks a lot for your awesome videos and newsletters.
I especially love your way of seeing how to learn and the fact that you share it the way you do. It’s very inspiring to me. I don’t know if it’s because I’m french or because, as you speak, I need myself to think about it too, but I sometimes slow down your videos or just listen to them a second time. 😋 Have a wonderful end of the week☺️
Thanks
You put into words something I have intrinsically felt for a long time.
this made me want to appreciate more the beauty of literature and art. great message!
I love this, it has showed my how to benefit & learn from all books 📚 & gifted a different perspective. Thank you Elizabeth
I was really happy when Lonely Island released their "YOLO" song. Because it shows how random and stupid and most of all hollow "You only live once" really is:
It is not at all consequential to start consuming and dancing and party because your life-span is limited. The fact that your life is short can just as well mean that you should not actively contribute to making it even shorter.
And there is a huge gray area between being caught in self-optimization and staying healthy and somewhat organized.
You pointed out some great arguments for your stand. It’s true that analyzing a fiction book to come up with our own conclusion creates more meaningful life lessons than those that are readily given to us.
It’s also one of the reasons why I love sci-Fi tv shows and movies. I am always amazed by how the writers present an accurate and profound description of human nature and their prospective reactions to a certain situation. Sci-Fi can be a great source of lessons for what could happen in the future, and how to live in the moment in order to maximize our chance of survival later on in life. We can learn about the characters thought processes, and we can also find ourselves in some of them, learned from their mistakes, and relate to other people who are different from us with much more compassion.
I totally agree with your argument. But both self-help and fictions have their benefits. Self-help books could be a quick boost to restore the mind and spirit in moment of distress, while fiction/sci-Fi, could be the perfect resources to bolster our critical thinking ability, and find a sense of comfort and creativity in someone else’s imagination or life experience.
A most enjoyable, and insightful, video. Thank you, Elizabeth - you never disappoint.
Random UA-cam suggestion, but I'm glad I've watched this😃. I completely agree with you, I feel like I learn more about myself and other people in reading a fiction book than from a self-help one. A fiction book is much more fun to read and I can get inspired by a character as opposed to reading a dull text, that is mostly based on lies (like `I was poor and ill at some young age, but all of a sudden I realized I had to change and all of a sudden I became strong willed out of thin air` etc.). And the first chapter in all self help books says in many words that `this book is the solution to all your problems` followed by the appeal to greed. So I don't usually read self help books 😁. But I appreciate non fiction books based on science and a genuine pursuit of truth, my favorite non fiction authors being Sam Harris and Robert Sapolsky.
That being said, I am a fantasy reader. I especially love Joe Abercrombie's and Michael R. Fletcher's work. Their novels are such a complex dive into the human psychology. I highly recommend anyone reading their books. The First Law especially, Glokta might be the best written character in all literature.
Quotes that would be very dry in a non fiction book are so much powerful and inspiring when reading the stories of Logen Ninefingers or Sand dan Glokta: `Once you've got a task to do, it's better to do it than live with the fear of it` or ` we must work with the tools we have`.
P.S. I had to listen at 0.75 speed, lol.
Thank you so much for this well formulated concept! It is what I felt but could nor formulate. When I read fiction it really transforms me, when I see art it affects me much harder than any self help book.
I feel silly for not considering the fact that I do learn from character driven fiction stories!! I’m obsessed with watching films. Especially as someone who grew up in a small town and wasn’t allowed to leave the house… I felt like I was only able to learn about the “real world” through watching movies and tv. I would love to read more fiction though it’s harder to find stuff that sounds interesting as an adult. I have over a hundred nonfiction recommendations but seldom am recommended good fiction. I will try and find some book recs on your website! Thank you for the insightful videos.
This is, hands down, your best video!
Thanks! Ma belle 🙂
Thanks for the SuperThanks Fabricio!
4:05 if we're hardwired to enjoy beauty then I appreciate seeing you so much in your videos.
No need for a 1.5 speed on this channel, love it
ohhh boy I always knew that we'd have a really great tipsy conversation if we ever met in a pub, but these are literally all my opinions! give them back!
This girl talking to my soul.♥️
thank you so so much for this video. it'll really help me explain to people why i love fiction books
This really transformed how I view the self-help genre! As you said, there are so many things that don't really hit home until we experience them ourselves or watch others go through them. Do you have any recommendations for good fiction books for a meaningful impact?
I love reading science fiction and fantasy. I really recommend Elizabeth's favourite Time Enough for Love - also my favourite 😄 Written by R.A. Heinlen. Also basically anything from Neil Gaiman. And Terry Pratchett. His early books are more fun but later on he started to make it also more thoughtful.
I recommend you Jane Eyre it's a very beautiful novel
along side I also recommend you 1984 and animal farm both are from George Orwell and trust me they worth reading ;)
@@Alaa-d6z Agree with the Orwell one, 1984. This book is one of the most intense books I've ever read.
Thank you so much for all of these recommendations!
I can recommend Terry Pratchett's Discworld. Starting with either Witches, Guards! Guards!, Soul Music or Small Gods.
Self-help books- Catchy title; tons spent on marketing; 30-40 pages that are a mix of the author's life story and promises about the type of awesome life you're going to have because of this book. Followed by page after page of word count fluff peppered with the occasional piece of semi-decent advice.
Philosophy and literature- Look what they need to mimic a fraction of our power!
Great thoughts
I remembered myself when I didn’t know about self help, I enjoyed life in a different way
But I also have to admit that self help taught me various different important life concepts which I wouldn’t be able to grasp from books
Loved the intro Elizabeth
Communication is Head to head and communion is heart to heart. Love 💕 n light XOXO 😘😘💋
The first 30 seconds was incredibly aesthetic and engaging. I too have learned a lot about from myself from reading fiction. The lines I highlight in books are related to self-improvement and human nature. Self-help books ARE a scam. Thank you for saying it. Loved your take in this topic, Liz!
Love you, Lizzy 🤍💯
I am really happy I accidentally found you. A lot of your points are things I either discovered myself or find very useful and worth thinking about. This video is the prime example of the first. I have never learned so many things about how to live my life from dry how-tos like I did from stories. 'Humans learn best from stories' is one of my personal core beliefs. I love to read fiction and do deep-dives into the psychology of the characters and dynamics between them and the setting. I love to write them and explore by doing that, too. I learned more from works of Neil Gaiman than I would ever learn from twice the amount of self-help books. A.E.Marling's fiction paints such beautiful pictures with words and shows such interesting sides of his characters, that his books tilt one's perception of reality more towards wonder just by realizing how differently things in general can be viewed by other people. Even Malcolm Gladwell, who's books aren't fiction, still is one of the best sources of interesting thoughts to me because he, too, talks in stories, shows things in contexts and characters and relationships.
To be absolutely honest, I managed to significantly improve my life by pondering an insight I got from a very well written Fanfiction based on a TV series. I think that when the story is well done and the reader has open, inquisitive mind, any literature can be enriching.
Neil Gaiman says in his Masterclass that one of the central tools of literature is using the 'lie' of a made-up story to tell a human truth. I think that is very much true.
The way you work with books of fiction is similar to mine and I love that you do it. I feel less alone and I feel hope I can learn more useful things from you. (I certainly already did.) Or just hang around and listen to you saying interesting things (though I have to slow you down to 0.8 speed :D ). Thank you for existing. ❤ You are very intelligent, interesting woman and I am frankly impressed by all of what I have seen from your videos so far. Also, my deepest respect for studying medicine, I think teachers and doctors/medical staff (or their cultural equivalents) are two pillars of any civilization.
(You are also very pretty. :) Not that it's very important, but why not praise you for more of the good things you possess?)
Your video edits are top notch. Love it.
this was so good! thank you for making the case for fiction books. White teeth by zadie smith is one of my favourite books and it has so many important life lessons in it. it is also a great book for 'wait, do I wanna live my life like these people?' much easier to internalise a lesson if it is tied to emotions.
btw, I love your editing style, and the fact that your videos are short
Absolutely love it when Ali's face pops up everytime you mention "procrastination" lol
Read both. One makes you become accountable, while the other helps you expand your mind to see things beyond the scope of what's on the surface.
Doing art in whatever form, level helps a lot with anxiety, depression. I think books are a part of that. The issue is that we normally spend a lot of tie in things that are needed but don't feed our soul, to say it in a way. It is hard to find the space... and also to not be so auto critic.
In my life I have read a lot of both. There's truth to fiction being effective, especially good one as I feel it almost counts as own experience. People mostly learn through own experience and it's the most natural way. The case against fiction is that there could be element of exactly that - fiction. Often it shows you things you wish would happen and dynamics that don't come very often in real life. there's nothing more dangerous than fiction that closely imitates life but doesn't really correspond to reality (learned this the hard way). As for self help it requires additional work and for lots of it you need to find ways in which these things are applicable and some of them may not even be for you. In it's worse forms if could be ineffective or even very biased towards writers worldwiew (especially religious beliefs) or misleading. There is no easy answer so this is why I stick to both. :)
this is the second video of yours that I'm watching and seeing the office reference, and I'm just gonna (gladly) assume that your every video has it 😁
Self-help books have helped me tremendously. The thing is you have to be active. When you read a self-help book, you have to apply what you've read or it isn't going to work. Similarly if you read fiction passively for entertainment, you're not going to learn anything about life from it either. You have to be an active reader and make connections, pause to think, ask questions and try to answer them, etc. Many people read self-help and don't apply any of it and therefore are not helped. And many people read and read and read fiction and their life never changes because they weren't really thinking. Especially in this social media book community where people just want to make sure they read as many books as possible and don't really savor anything.
The issue is, not everyone is capable of ( or perhaps have sufficient time to spend on) conducting deeper analysis into fiction books to derive these lessons by themselves. Furthermore, it's dependent on the types of fiction books a person likes to read as well ( some people treat fiction as an escape and therefore may be disinclined to select 'deep' books, not to mention the quality of the authors - definitely should not be taking life lessons from some of the authors out there lol).
So, for some, self help books that lay everything out cut and dry will be more beneficial.
Therefore I take issue with the title of this video, but I understand why it is written the way it is. :).
Love you videos and looking forward to the next one!
TC
Gandalf > Peterson
Just sayin
I love her now
I normally adjust video speed to 1.25 or higher, but for you I had to slow it down
I love Liz’s content😭
How’s there no copyright issues tho since she uses so many vids from other creators? Is there copyright free vids like music as well?
Loved the video!!
Loved this vid and how you presented it, although I have one suggestion: do you mind slowing down and pausing now and then when you speak? It takes some time for me to process what is being said in general, even with complex topics. Again loved the video, just those two I would suggest you can do
Maybe you should try just lowering the playback speed - UA-cam allows that.
@@АлександрБарсуков-т2э I know and I have done that, it's just the pausing and pacing is what bothered me a bit
@@billyguns6975 i have that problem with pratchet books, but she isnt jumping from topic to topic. Or person to person as the case may be.
@@devilsolution9781 ya but suppose you're doing a presentation for something and you rush it. You might be on the same topic, but it's unlikely that your audience would fully process what you said
Fiction books isn't my favorite type and didn't read alot of them because i always taught that they are such a wasting of time , but i think my view changed after this video.
Thank you Lizzy ❤️
do you mean fiction?
@@nooriman5944 thank for your correction 🌹
Really liked that intro montage
It sounds more natural at .75× speed. Do you increase the playback speed ?
My gods, I love the way you think. I’ve always found a more salient form of self help in fiction than I have in the usual self help book. There were some I liked, but never finished. But I’ve almost always finished a good fiction book-especially if it’s helped me gain new perspectives or to make more sense of the world around me.
Great content! I really appreciate your point of view on this. I have spent many hours consuming content in the self-help/personal development space, much of which has been very insightful, practical, and applicable. From my perspective, a person Googling anything in this space begins with "how to" which by its nature is kinda dry, direct, clinical, etc. For me, that type of presentation works well.
I saw another video of yours describing your approach to studying MS... if memory serves me. In that you go on to tell us how you must create a story or use an existing story around it, in a way anchoring it to memory, making it easier to tap into.
To me you seem to be a creative and very much a romantic. No shade thrown, but I am commenting because your approach to this space is very unique, very intriguing for me. I have not thought to give sh/pd content a narrative, a fictional account, to personalize it. I kinda have always taken the lessons at face value.
But this is refreshing. Again, thank you for your perspective on this.