I felt a lot of this when I was first getting involved in effective altruism. Two of the things that I think are most important and valuable in the EA mindset—being aware of tradeoffs, and having an acute sense of how much needs to get done in the world and how much is being lost for a lack of resources to fix it—can also make for a pretty intense flavor of guilt and obligation. These days I think of these core elements of an EA mindset as being pieces of mental technology that really would ideally be installed gradually alongside other pieces of mental technology which can support them and mitigate their worst effects and make them part of a full and flourishing life.
Those other pieces of technology, at least for me, are something like:
a conviction that I should, in fact, be aspiring to a full and flourishing life; that any plan which doesn’t viscerally feel like it’ll be a good, satisfying, aspirational life to lead is not ultimately a viable plan; that I may find sources of strength and flourishing outside where I imagined, and that it’d fine if I have to be creative or look harder to find them, but that I cannot and will not make life plans that don’t entail having a good life.
a deep comfort with my own values, some of which are altruistic and some of which are selfish, and with my own failings as a person; the ability to look at myself and see a lot of shortcomings and muddled thinking and mistakes and ways I’ve hurt people and to nonetheless feel love and pride for myself. For me, at least, the reason it hurt to notice I had selfish values was very close to the reason it hurt to notice I’d made a mistake or handled a situation poorly; I had a lot of my self-esteem and my conviction I deserved to be happy and to be loved tied up in high expectations of myself. But of course it’s very damaging to your altruistic endeavors, and to your personal growth, to be unwilling to look at yourself the way you truly are, or to love yourself only for things you won’t always live up to, so I’m actually much stronger and better once I deeply internalized that I am flawed, and that I am selfish, and that I am incoherent and muddled in many ways, and that this is also true of all other humans and we all remain deserving of good lives all the same.
a sense that I am better and a better EA when I’m stronger and happier; that depression and burnout genuinely sap my productivity and my creativity and affect my epistemics; that miserably dragging myself across the finish line actually produces worse results than living a life I take pride in and enjoy deeply; an appreciation for just how much I’m capable of when I’m happy and love my life and love the people around me and love the work I do and don’t have to fight with myself to focus or prioritize.
a healthier relationship to my own motivational system: I used to do a lot of what I think of as ‘dragging my brain across sharp rocks’ to get stuff done. The stuff was aversive; I didn’t want to do it; I hated doing it; I forced myself to do it anyway. This changed how I related to all kinds of tasks, even one that didn’t have to be aversive. I thought of ‘intrinsic motivation’ as basically willpower, the willingness to make myself hurt to get things done. It was hard to imagine doing things out of an uncomplicated, not-internally-coercive interest in making them happen. It took me a long time, and I had the luxury of a home environment and job that made it possible, but I flat-out don’t do that anymore. I do things when I want to do them; when it would take internal coercion and ‘dragging my brain over rocks’ to do things, I don’t do them. (I allow myself to make myself start a thing for a few seconds, to see if it just needed activation energy, but I don’t force myself through things that require ongoing internal making-myself). And it turns out that once I have some trust that doing things won’t be unpleasant and aversive, I do plenty of things, and it’s more achievable to add new things.
For me, this has taken a decade. I don’t think I was particularly good at it, I don’t know that I made all the right tradeoffs in doing it, and I hope it’s faster and better for other people. But I do want people to know that there’s a way of living your values that doesn’t feel fueled by guilt, that it’s possible to be an EA and have a life you just love, and that you should absolutely be aiming to be your strongest and best self rather than the version of yourself who sacrificed the most.
I felt a lot of this when I was first getting involved in effective altruism. Two of the things that I think are most important and valuable in the EA mindset—being aware of tradeoffs, and having an acute sense of how much needs to get done in the world and how much is being lost for a lack of resources to fix it—can also make for a pretty intense flavor of guilt and obligation. These days I think of these core elements of an EA mindset as being pieces of mental technology that really would ideally be installed gradually alongside other pieces of mental technology which can support them and mitigate their worst effects and make them part of a full and flourishing life.
Those other pieces of technology, at least for me, are something like:
a conviction that I should, in fact, be aspiring to a full and flourishing life; that any plan which doesn’t viscerally feel like it’ll be a good, satisfying, aspirational life to lead is not ultimately a viable plan; that I may find sources of strength and flourishing outside where I imagined, and that it’d fine if I have to be creative or look harder to find them, but that I cannot and will not make life plans that don’t entail having a good life.
a deep comfort with my own values, some of which are altruistic and some of which are selfish, and with my own failings as a person; the ability to look at myself and see a lot of shortcomings and muddled thinking and mistakes and ways I’ve hurt people and to nonetheless feel love and pride for myself. For me, at least, the reason it hurt to notice I had selfish values was very close to the reason it hurt to notice I’d made a mistake or handled a situation poorly; I had a lot of my self-esteem and my conviction I deserved to be happy and to be loved tied up in high expectations of myself. But of course it’s very damaging to your altruistic endeavors, and to your personal growth, to be unwilling to look at yourself the way you truly are, or to love yourself only for things you won’t always live up to, so I’m actually much stronger and better once I deeply internalized that I am flawed, and that I am selfish, and that I am incoherent and muddled in many ways, and that this is also true of all other humans and we all remain deserving of good lives all the same.
a sense that I am better and a better EA when I’m stronger and happier; that depression and burnout genuinely sap my productivity and my creativity and affect my epistemics; that miserably dragging myself across the finish line actually produces worse results than living a life I take pride in and enjoy deeply; an appreciation for just how much I’m capable of when I’m happy and love my life and love the people around me and love the work I do and don’t have to fight with myself to focus or prioritize.
a healthier relationship to my own motivational system: I used to do a lot of what I think of as ‘dragging my brain across sharp rocks’ to get stuff done. The stuff was aversive; I didn’t want to do it; I hated doing it; I forced myself to do it anyway. This changed how I related to all kinds of tasks, even one that didn’t have to be aversive. I thought of ‘intrinsic motivation’ as basically willpower, the willingness to make myself hurt to get things done. It was hard to imagine doing things out of an uncomplicated, not-internally-coercive interest in making them happen. It took me a long time, and I had the luxury of a home environment and job that made it possible, but I flat-out don’t do that anymore. I do things when I want to do them; when it would take internal coercion and ‘dragging my brain over rocks’ to do things, I don’t do them. (I allow myself to make myself start a thing for a few seconds, to see if it just needed activation energy, but I don’t force myself through things that require ongoing internal making-myself). And it turns out that once I have some trust that doing things won’t be unpleasant and aversive, I do plenty of things, and it’s more achievable to add new things.
For me, this has taken a decade. I don’t think I was particularly good at it, I don’t know that I made all the right tradeoffs in doing it, and I hope it’s faster and better for other people. But I do want people to know that there’s a way of living your values that doesn’t feel fueled by guilt, that it’s possible to be an EA and have a life you just love, and that you should absolutely be aiming to be your strongest and best self rather than the version of yourself who sacrificed the most.