Conversation

did you know that the etymology of the ordinary english word "meditation" has nothing to do with emptying the mind of thoughts - it is in fact about thinking - or with reducing "stress"
Image
7
2
26
let's take a look at the etymology of "stress" while we're at it > "hardship, adversity, force, pressure," in part a shortening of Middle English distress (n.) distress: > late 13c., "circumstance that causes anxiety or hardship"
Image
Image
Quote Tweet
"stress," which as a psychological term was apparently coined in the 1920s, sure is a convenient way to avoid having to name a feeling
Show this thread
1
5
what stands out to me about the etymologies is that they aren't psychological. stress / distress have etymologies that are about *stuff happening in your life that is hard*. the psychological sense of "stress" retreats the meaning to something mental and internal to you
2
7
Replying to
let's take a look at the etymologies of "think" and "thought" too > Old English þencan "imagine, conceive in the mind; consider, meditate, remember; intend, wish, desire" > Old English þoht, geþoht "process of thinking, a thought; compassion"
Image
Image
1
7
intend! wish! desire! compassion! what stands out to me about *these* etymologies is that they recognize no thinking / feeling distinction; a sense of thinking as something not detached, not attempting to stay third-person or objective or distanced
3
16