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  happiness 116, 160, 175–6, 189, 190, 220, 241, 267

  high horses 168

  Hollinghurst, Alan: The Line of Beauty 108

  honesty 73, 75, 89, 102, 145, 188, 199

  emotional 43

  vs politeness 259

  in psychotherapy 54–5

  and secrecy 199, 200

  and sexual liberation 150

  see also frankness

  Hooch, Pieter de 194

  Interior with Women beside a Linen Cupboard 193

  human nature

  a diplomat’s pessimism concerning 97

  fallen 16–18

  and impostor syndrome 216–19

  original goodness vs. natural sin 89–90

  human needs 241, 244–6, 245, 250

  Hume, David: ‘Of Luxury’ 239, 240

  humiliation 15, 115, 221

  fear of 216

  and poverty 251–2

  vicarious 220

  humour 3, 291–2

  gallows 260

  idealism 259–60

  idiocy 79, 100, 113, 213–16, 292

  imbalances, emotional 36–9

  imperfection 16–18

  im-perfectionism in art and culture 271–6

  impostor syndrome 216–19

  Industrial Revolution/industrialization 266, 267, 271

  inequality 251, 254

  inner voice/ judge 63–5

  intelligence 2–3

  interesting, gift of being 101–2

  intrinsic value 267–8

  intuition 1–2

  vs analysis 257–8

  and Romanticism 257

  irony 260

  irritability 25, 43, 125, 172

  James, Henry 84–5

  James, William 115

  Japanese aesthetics 274–6

  Johnson, Samuel (Dr) 238

  judge, inner 63–5

  Kafka, Franz 277

  Kant, Immanuel 124

  Kiefer, Anselm 277–9

  Alkahest 277–9, 278

  Kinderdijk Windmill, Alblasserdam 272

  kindness 79–99

  charitable interpretation 79–80

  and Christianity 98–9

  in dealing with enemies 87–8

  and diplomacy 94–8

  and frankness 98

  pain, and the demands of 85–6

  and politeness 88–94

  and psychotherapy 56

  and Romanticism 99

  and tragic failures 81–3

  and weakness of strength 83–5

  kintsugi 276

  bowl 275

  Købke, Christen 285

  View of Østerbro from Dosseringen 284

  Lawrence, Mary Wells 248

  Leonardo da Vinci 282, 286

  The Madonna Litta 196

  libraries 4

  listening 101

  active listening in psychotherapy 57–8

  the good listener 109–12

  Liszt, Franz 4

  literature 3, 4, 84–5, 192

  loneliness 15, 61, 107, 118, 122, 189

  and culture 282–5, 289

  and love affairs 165

  and Romanticism 130, 282

  losers 81–3

  love

  ability to love children 143–4

  affairs see affairs, love

  choosing a partner 133–5

  circle of 65

  crushes 189

  disappointment in 194–8

  and education 144–8

  falling in 49, 61, 129, 134

  Greek idea of 145

  inability to 69

  intimate origins of 195–8

  and marriage 204–8

  parental 195, 197–8

  relationships see relationships

  in response to attack 87–8

  Romantic cult of human-to-human love see Romanticism

  and secrecy 198–200

  self-love 50–51

  as a skill 3, 171

  unrequited 190–92

  see also compassion

  luxury 107, 239

  lying 41–3

  Mandeville, Bernard: The Fable of the Bees 238–9, 240

  manners 90, 114

  see also politeness

  Marcus Aurelius 8

  marriage 16, 204–8

  and impulse 205–6

  and Romanticism 2

  and security 207–8

  and slow maturation 206–7

  Marshmallow Test 205–6

  Marx, Karl 225

  Marxism 251

  Maslow, Abraham, Pyramid of Needs 244–6, 245

  materialism 238

  see also consumerism

  Matisse, Henri 282

  Woman Reading at a Small Table 283

  Medici family 12

  meditation 67

  philosophical 67–71

  melancholy 19–20

  Montaigne, Michel de 218–19, 246

  Essays 8, 218

  Morgan, Christiana, Thematic Apperception Test 28–31, 30

  motives 41, 85–6, 200

  Murray, Henry, Thematic Apperception Test 28–31, 30

  museums 4, 5, 6, 271

  music 4

  nagging 147–8

  nature 121–5

  neglect 73, 134, 137, 156, 186, 266

  feelings of 91, 220, 248

  Romanticism’s neglect of domestic life 192–4

  negotiations 94–8

  Netherlands Board of Tourism 271, 274

  Netscher, Caspar: The Lacemaker 252–4, 253

  normality

  arguments of 180–82

  and culture 71–3

  Ogilvy, David 248

  oral sex 151

  original sin 16–18, 17

  pain

  being out of touch with 161

  and the demands of kindness 85–6

  panic 25, 36–7, 63, 106, 118, 177, 288

  alternatives to 47

  parental love 195, 197–8

  parenting 248–9, 288–9

  partner-as-child theory 141–4

  past, the emotional 27–49

  amnesia concerning 39–40

  and denial 39–40

  emotionally healthy childhood 44–9

  primal wounds 33–6, 38, 67

  and self-deception 41–3

  unknown past affecting the present 27–31

  Patek Philippe 248–9

  perfectionism 288, 294

  pessimism 115–16

  a diplomat’s pessimism concerning human nature 97

  and politeness 89–90

  and relationships 115, 188–90

  vs sentimentality 277

  philanthropists 232–5, 261

  philosophical meditation 67–71

  philosophy/philosophers 4, 8, 11–12, 26

  philosophy of consolation 18 see also solace

  pineapples 262–6, 263, 264, 265, 269

  Plato 4, 121

  politeness 88–94

  cold 105

  exaggerated, of the good child 211

  the frank and the polite person 88–94

  vs honesty 259

  and the stranger 90

  and wisdom 292

  poverty 240, 251–2, 254, 277

  prices 271

  cheapness 262–71

  pride, excessive 162

  primal wounds 33–6, 38–9, 67

  Proust, Marcel: In Search of Lost Time 8, 152–4

  psychotherapy 53–67

  active listening 57–8

  change through 65–7

  and importance of a breakdown 73–5

  and the inner voice/judge 63–5

  interpretation 58–61

  and kindness 56

  therapeutic relationship 61–3

  and time 58

  purity 261

  Pyrrho 26

  Racine, Jean 4

  rage 15, 20, 25–6, 115, 116, 143, 172, 178, 250

  realism 98

  vs idealism 259–60

&nb
sp; and wisdom 290–91, 292–3

  reassurance 66–7, 69, 102, 139–41, 162, 176, 184, 186

  and diplomacy 96, 98

  regret 69, 80, 86, 101, 106, 219, 277, 294

  relationships

  arguments in see arguments

  breakdown of 15, 21, 73

  choosing a partner 133–5

  and Classical attitudes 132–3

  and compromise 200–202

  disappointment in 194–8

  and domestic life 192–4

  falling in love 49, 61, 129, 134

  father–son 248–9

  and fear of rejection 104, 139–40

  of friendship see friendship

  getting together 129–48

  good enough 288–9

  and hellishness of self and others 137–9

  and listening 109–12

  longing for reassurance 66–7, 139–41, 176, 184, 186

  love affairs see affairs, love

  and marriage see marriage

  over-optimism about 160–61

  parent–child 248–9, 288

  partner-as-child theory 141–4

  and pessimism 115, 188–90

  and politeness see politeness

  reacting to a partner’s tricky behaviour 135–6

  restorative complaint prompts 165–8

  and Romanticism 129–32, 189

  and secrecy 198–200

  sex in see sex

  shyness barrier to 100–102

  religion 3–4, 100, 282

  Christian see Christianity

  and Romanticism 282

  scripture and culture 4–7

  Rembrandt 4

  resentment 69, 71, 122, 163, 165, 221

  resilience 31, 47, 81, 248, 275, 293

  restlessness 70, 226–7

  Rijksmuseum 4, 6, 271

  Rikyū, Sen no 276

  Rilke, Rainer Maria: ‘Archaic Torso of Apollo’ 70

  ritual 14–15

  robustness 91–2

  Romanticism 2

  and arguments 169

  Classical vs Romantic culture 132–3, 257–62

  and crushes 189

  and the exotic 261

  German 70

  and intuition 257

  and kindness 99

  and loneliness 130, 282

  and marriage 2

  neglect of domestic life 192–4

  and the rare 261

  and relationships 129–32, 189

  as replacement of religion 282

  and sex 130, 131

  Rorschach, Hermann, inkblot test 28, 29

  Rosenzweig, Saul, Picture-Frustration Study 31, 32

  Rousseau, Jean-Jacques 88, 239–40

  routine 261

  Ruisdael, Jacob van 271–4

  The Windmill at Wijk bij Duurstede 273

  Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts 232, 233, 234

  Sainsbury family 232

  St Paul’s Cathedral 265, 266

  sanity 18

  and sane insanity 18–19

  scepticism, emotional 26–7

  Schopenhauer, Arthur 4

  scripture 4–7

  secrecy 198–200

  good children as keepers of 211

  secularism/secularization 3–7, 15

  security 207–8

  self-acceptance 292

  self-certainty see confidence/self-certainty

  self-criticism 113–14

  self-deception 41–3

  self-development 8–9, 10

  self-doubt 93–4, 101, 161

  self-esteem 50–51, 63, 103, 115, 117, 245

  see also confidence/self-certainty

  self-help 7–8

  self-image 46, 69

  self-knowledge 25–75

  difficulty of 25–6

  and the emotional past see past, the emotional

  and psychotherapy see psychotherapy

  self-awareness of an interesting person 101

  and self-deception 41–3

  and self-ignorance 25–6

  and window daydreaming 120–21

  self-love 50–51, 170

  Seneca 8

  sentimentality 169, 277

  sex

  anal 151–2

  erotic disengagement 158

  and Freud 150–51

  in love affairs 163–4 see also affairs, love

  meaning of sexual excitement 150–54

  no-sex argument 186–8

  oral 151

  problems of a grown-up ‘good child’ around 212

  and Romanticism 130, 131

  sexual degradation/defilement 152–4

  sexual desirability 99

  sexual drives 27, 73

  sexual liberation 149–50

  sexual understanding 3

  and tension 115

  Shakespeare, William 83, 101

  The Merchant of Venice 100

  shame 19, 73, 161

  shaming 157

  shirking 148

  shyness 100–102

  simplicity 20–21

  sin 89–90

  original 16–18, 17

  Smith, Adam 227

  and Marx 225

  The Wealth of Nations 224, 241

  social catastrophe 112–14

  Socrates 26

  solace 7, 18, 102, 123, 269

  and culture 277–88

  solitude 119–20

  Sophocles 4, 82, 83

  sorrow 19–20, 80, 188, 203, 244

  and art 277–9, 278, 281

  intergenerational 67

  reliving 60

  sources of 143, 195, 198, 211

  and therapies 69

  specialization 223–8

  spontaneity 258–9

  status 81, 108, 123, 216, 244, 252, 277

  pursuit of 21

  strangers 50, 65, 72, 79, 80, 90

  and dreams of fame 220–21

  to ourselves 25–6

  transformed into friends 103

  strength 84, 285

  weakness of 83–5

  sublimity/the sublime 123–4

  success 36, 63, 65, 81, 116, 138, 221

  in business 99, 179, 232, 246

  and fame 221, 223

  and impostor syndrome 216, 219

  and self-esteem 115

  and wisdom 294

  suffering

  through self-ignorance 25–6

  for ‘small things’ 21

  suicide 15, 55, 81

  supermarkets 228–30, 229, 231, 232, 235

  teasing 107–9

  Terence 101

  therapeutic relationship 61–3

  time

  the emotional past see past, the emotional

  and psychotherapy 58

  sense of 27

  Tobias and the Angel 286

  Verrocchio, Workshop of, painting 287

  Tolstoy, Leo 246

  tragedy 16, 35–6, 81–3

  transitional objects 282–5

  trust 3, 52, 62, 89, 99, 152, 153, 180

  broken 42

  and impostor syndrome 217

  inability to 69, 72

  Turgenev, Ivan 84–5

  Verrocchio, Andrea del, and Tobias and the Angel 286, 287

  Voltaire 246

  vulnerability 3, 21, 34, 56, 69, 91–2, 102–3

  and fame 221–2

  wabi-sabi 276

  Wagner, Richard 4

  warmth 105–7

  warm teasing 108

  wealth 100, 232, 235

  and communism 251

  generation 238, 241

  pursuit of 21

  and virtue 240, 241 see also philanthropists

  Whitman, Walt: ‘Song of Myself’ 223–4

  will, weakness of (akrasia) 11–12

  window daydreaming 120–21

  Winnicott, Donald 282–5, 288

  wisdom 290–95

  and appreciation 291

  and calm 295

  of compromise 200–202

 
; and envy 293–4

  and folly 65, 291

  and forgiveness 292–3

  and friendship 64–5

  and humour 291–2

  of melancholy attitude 20

  and politeness 292

  and realism 290–91, 292–3

  and regrets 294

  and resilience 293

  and self-acceptance 292

  success, failure and 294

  witnessing 54–5

  work

  and the capitalist society see capitalism

  ‘division of labour’ 224

  and fame 219–23

  good-enough jobs 289

  psychological effects of 225–6

  specialization 223–8

  and under-confidence 213–19

  worldliness 55

  Wren, Christopher, south tower of St Paul’s Cathedral 265, 266

  Xu Zhen 228–32, 229, 231, 236

  Zen

  aesthetics 274–6, 275

  philosophers 42, 274–6

  The School of Life is a global organization committed to emotional education and well-being. It focuses on delivering psychotherapy, as well as drawing upon culture more generally, to illuminate topics of emotional concern. It treats individuals, couples, families and organizations, publishes books, makes films and runs ten centres around the world. For more information, see: www.theschooloflife.com.

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  First published 2019

  Copyright © The School of Life, 2019

  This is an anthology of materials drawn from the work of The School of Life Press and The School of Life Blog (www.theschooloflife.com/thebookoflife). These materials have previously been, and may continue to be, published or otherwise made available elsewhere by the copyright holder.

  The right of Alain de Botton to be identified as the author of the introduction of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

  The permissions on pp. 299–300 constitute an extension of this copyright page.

  The passage referencing Bernard Mandeville on pp. 238–9 appeared in a slightly different form in Alain de Botton’s Status Anxiety (Penguin, 2004) – and is included here with full permission.

  ISBN: 978-0-241-98585-4

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

 

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