I think you're pointing to the right thing but this really illuminates why I dislike the "trauma" framing that's become popular. Not all inflexibility are trauma, and expecting so makes them much harder to notice. Rather, they're all instances more generally of cached responses.
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More importantly, it misdirects attention towards some potential past event that needs to be processed, rather than the current reality of how creativity is getting stuck.
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I don't know if you've read this article from an ex-radical anarchist, but it seems relevant to the subject and it's a fascinating dive into the emotions behind radicalism:https://quillette.com/2018/12/11/sad-radicals/ …
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This is fantastic, thanks!
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this is kinda similar to Zizek's theory of ideology
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There are definite parallels. I bet both are susceptible to the same types of methods like radical acceptance.
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Studying individual trauma is trending... studying cultural traumas needs more attention
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