The First Night: Deny Trauma
A chapter summary from The Courage to Be Disliked by Ichiro Kishimi & Fumitake Koga.
“People he knows are crippled by genuine trauma — abuse, loss, illness — and to say they "choose" their suffering is cruel.”
The young man arrives furious. He has read about Adler and concluded the position is naive. People he knows are crippled by genuine trauma — abuse, loss, illness — and to say they "choose" their suffering is cruel. The philosopher does not deny the trauma. He denies the causal chain. Two people experience similar trauma; one is destroyed by it, one becomes a counselor for others who survived it. The trauma did not pick the outcome. The person did, through what they decided the trauma meant and what they organized their later life around.
Adler called this teleology, the study of goals, as opposed to etiology, the study of causes. The young man's friend who cannot leave his room is not held there by past abuse, in Adler's frame; he is using the past to justify a present goal — avoiding the world. The trauma is the explanation he reaches for. Take the trauma away and another reason will be found. Adler's claim, which the young man will resist all night, is that humans are forward-looking creatures who select causes after the fact to defend choices they have already made. The choice may be hidden even from the chooser, which is part of why it endures.
The philosopher distinguishes inferiority feeling from inferiority complex. Feeling inferior — wanting to be taller, smarter, richer — is a universal human starting point and the engine of all growth. Adler treated the striving to overcome inferiority as the basic motive of human life and the source of every meaningful achievement. The complex is something different: the use of an inferiority claim as an excuse not to act. "I cannot succeed because I am short" or "because I came from a poor family" or "because I was hurt as a child." These statements may be factually true, but their function in the speaker's life is to close off the question of what to do next.
The chapter ends with the young man unconvinced but uneasy. The philosopher has not denied his pain. The philosopher has only said that pain does not have to mean what the young man has decided it means. The whole rest of the book will turn on whether the young man can accept that small shift — that the meaning of the past is present work, not finished history. Until he does, he will keep arguing. The reader, hearing the argument, is meant to hear themselves on both sides. Adler's frame is not therapy in the conventional sense; it is closer to an ethical demand. You are responsible for what your past becomes in your hands.
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