“So just do it” is a glaring one for me.

Simply because it is disregarding someone else’s thought processes and how their mind works. Where simply ‘just do it’ is not as easily and readily accomplished. This kind of advice is always uttered when one person is going on about how they’re tired of something and want to do something else. So this gets mentioned.

It could be a lot of reasons as to why, even if it is down to the obvious reasons. My valid reason a lot of the time is that I just don’t have the energy or will to just magically get myself to do something.

  • temporal_spider@lemm.ee
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    6 days ago

    Go to bed early so you can get a good night’s sleep. I have heard this so many times, and I’m convinced it was the cause of many sleepless nights. It’s probably great advice for people with a normal circadian rhythm, but it’s useless for those with a non-standard chronotype. That shit is baked into your DNA, and medicine currently has no idea how to change it. Especially since it’s so much easier just to blame the night owl.

    • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Lord, how I couldn’t agree more. There are so many conflicting studies about how humans sleep because there’s a fuckin lot of us and we each sleep a bit different. I, for example, can take a 30 minute nap and hit one REM cycle and then go at 100% for 4 hours. My partner needs to hit at least 3 REM cycles across 9 hours in order to feel okay for even one second of their day.

    • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Morning people are in a fucking religious cult. They believe anyone who doesn’t want to wake up as early as them is defective.

    • RickC137@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      A regular sleep rhythm makes all the difference. Doesn’t matter when you go to bed as long as it’s around the same time.

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    My old boss used to say: “there is never a good time. Do it anyway”

    This was often about taking your holidays, visiting your parents, testing a theory, building a PoC, etc. Analysis paralysis kills success.

    • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      I love this advice, and I like to combine it with one other

      “Take one more step”

      It’s similar to “give 110%” but I don’t want you to burn out. Give me 80%, and then give me just one more step. Expand your capabilities in a comfortable range.

      For this particular scenario: take it one more step and help them make the decision. I’m not gonna influence your decision, if I can avoid it. But I’ll be your rubber ducky and I’ll let you know when you need to pause for a second and gather your thoughts to find the solution.

  • Goldholz@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    6 days ago

    For me as someone with ADHD and Autism i could list so many. But the most useless defenetly are:

    “Just use a planner”

    “You can learn to reign it in, others have learned to do so too!”

    “Dont throw such a fit over something that small! I only changed your routine/moved around your entire order”

    “You just need to focus more!”

    “Pull yourself up by the bootstraps!”

  • MTK@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    “Trust your gut” sorry but our gut means our monkey brain. If logic is an option, trust logic. Trust your gut only applies if:

    • You are talking about fast situations where all you can do is react as fast as possible
    • You are really stupid and your gut out smarts you
    • You are extremely biased and so your logoc is flawed
    • You are talking about food
    • big_slap@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      I respectfully disagree. there are things out of your control you must accept. if you do not, it will only stress your mind and body out.

      focus on the things that you can, like keeping your family intact and having a good support group. good luck!

    • poweruser@lemmy.sdf.org
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      7 days ago

      I find that people often say this when what “it is” is something too ugly to name. “It is what it is” is true, but sometimes what “it is” is that the speaker is a racist defending another racist

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    6 days ago

    “Just do it” is helpful in some cases, but mostly not. E.g. you think that a hobby is cool but you don’t feel like you could start it? Just do it, take a course, try it out. It becomes unhelpful quickly when the realities of your life are just different. Telling in unemployed person with debt who is fascinated with flying to “just get a pilot license” ignores their reality. But telling a business analyst who’s interested in manga but feels like this hobby would destroy his image, to “just do it and buy some mangas” is totally valid.

    I have been struggling financially for most of my life and have received way too often the unhelpful advice to “just do it. Live a little.” Just book that 100€ flight to Italy and see Rome. Just get a smartphone, everyone has one now! (That was when smartphoneplans were very expensive here and I couldn’t justify such a high monthly cost. Yes I’m older.)

    There is way too much “just do it” advise by people that live in their nice little bubble of a well-off, supportive family system and never realize that the only reason they can “just do it” is because they never had to eat rice with tomato sauce for 3 days in a row because there were only 10€ on the bank account by the 26th.

    On a similar note, “just get a job, just learn something more profitable/in an industry with high wages” is also an often unhelpful advice. Not everyone can be good at everything. And not everyone can just uproot their lives and go back to school for a few years. Yes, some people can do amazing things like get a masters degree while working full-time and having kids. But this advise, too, ignores the reality of many people. If you have no support system or if you simply aren’t cut out for the currently profitable jobs, you can’t just magically switch careers. And even if you do: things change so quickly and there is no guarantee, that the currently well-paid job will still be like that in 5-10 years.

  • steeznson@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I remember my friend being really upset that her long term relationship failed with her partner leaving for another woman. I remember trying to empathise saying something along the lines of, “You can’t ever really trust anyone no matter how long you know them.”

    I still kinda believe that however it was 100% the wrong thing to say in terms of being reassuring since it implied they’d been naive which was not the case. Their ex had all the responsibility for their relationship ending.

  • MrIlves@sopuli.xyz
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    6 days ago

    My math teacher, when I said I did not know how to do the home work: “Well, just do more math!”

    How do you expect me to do more math, when I do not know how?

    On hindsight, he was right… I should have re-done quite a bit of the math courses, properly, so that I would have had the basis to advance. At that moment, he did not have the time to help me, since he knew I had been left too far behind to quickly catch up. It just felt so stupid to teen age me. I ended up dropping out of the higher math courses and just did the basic ones. Ended up with great scores for the basic maths, with a far better mental health. I had been strugling with math for so long.

  • Broadfern@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    It’s those times where I shorten my response to something like “thanks I’ll keep that in mind” or “I appreciate you trying to help” and then brush it off/not follow that advice, because it usually comes from people who at least sort of care but have no idea what to say or how to fix the situation.

    If someone genuinely wants to invest in helping your situation they’ll ask and be open. For me most of the time my answer is “you being there is enough” and when I tell them I don’t expect them to have answers to my problems they relax too.

    If it’s randos trying to be argumentative or dismissive then they can go sit naked on a cactus. /tangent

    TL;DR: You’re right, but it’s an onslaught and you deserve peace of mind. You aren’t obligated to defend yourself to them.

  • leaky_shower_thought@feddit.nl
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    7 days ago

    for some reason, someone saying “just stay calm” would just make me brace up.

    or if someone says “it’s easy, you can do it”, the sus gauge starts rising.

  • CptCosmicMoron @lemmy.ca
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    7 days ago

    “Choose to be happy” This is advice I’ve heard from people on Reddit who have overcome their depression and say it’s a choice. No, Happy, it is not.

    • OceanSoap@lemmy.ml
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      6 days ago

      There’s a major push coming to ban depression meds. I had long, drawn-out conversations with people who genuinely think exercise will fix things.

      Yeah, for people without clinical depression, maybe.

    • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      I try really hard to not downplay the environmental effects that played into my depression journey when I give advice for this exact reason. You’re right, it’s not easy to fundamentally change the way you think to such a degree that your hormones change. It’s possible though. But it’s probably gonna need a disruption in your environment that you may or may not be able to facilitate. I got lucky, and my disruption happened to me so my journey was helped a lot

    • NABDad@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      “I was lucky and my brain chemistry corrected itself, so all you need to do is stop being unlucky and be lucky like me!”

      While we’re at it, if you can’t reach the top shelf, just grow taller. That’s what I did.

    • thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Maybe a bit of a stretch, but I try my best to interpret things in the best possible way (sometimes to the point of naivety). In a way, I think of it as “choosing to be happy”, in the sense that if someone says or does something that could upset me, I try to look for a way to interpret their actions as something that doesn’t upset me.

      Of course, this doesn’t always apply, but I’ve experienced that it makes life a lot better. A lot of unpleasant things can be attributed to mistakes or misunderstandings, which are a lot easier to not get upset about than people being intentionally mean.

    • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      The only actual advice I can think of that relates is refusing to be involved with people who make you unhappy (which I realize so much of requires choice and resources to island yourself off in this way).

      Its still something to keep in mind, if you can insulate yourself from people you’ve noticr make you unhappy and overstimulated, that is a very different state of being even saying nothing about whatever “happiness” is. I think you can still like or love someone who you also cannot emotionally and ohysically tolerate being around, but sooner or later you have to listen to what your being tries to tell you or somatically express

      If I had to choose between happiness or freedom from pain, I would choose the latter every time. Happiness can be stumbled upon or negotiated or gradually arriver at, pain needs to be alleviated or it cancels out everything else

    • venotic@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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      7 days ago

      I loved the thanksimcured subreddit because they just mock this kind of thing.

      Depression is a recurring thing, it comes back at anytime and it will level you when it does. What people who ever claim to have “defeated” depression or “overcome it” are simply confusing depression with general sadness. General sadness can easily be overcome because it isn’t as much of a weight on you as depression is.

      But then you say something like that and some asshole comes right up to you saying shit like “now you’re just gatekeeping what a mental illness is!”.

      Fucking Reddit dumbasses are a piece of work.

      • OceanSoap@lemmy.ml
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        6 days ago

        Well, no, there are clinical forms of depression, which are reoccurring forms, and then there’s bouts of depression, which generally are caused by a specific event or change. Those types usually have fixes, but they’re worse than “general sadness”.