Masterclass
To discuss Adlerian psychology concepts from The Courage to be Happy.
Key Takeaways
Empathy is a Skill: Defined as imagining another’s life to understand their perspective, not merely agreeing with them (sympathy). It requires horizontal relationships built on mutual respect.
Teleology Over Aetiology: Adlerian psychology asserts that present goals, not past causes, drive behaviour. The past is a subjective narrative constructed by the “self now” to justify current choices.
Change Requires Courage: True change is difficult because it requires “death” of the old self. People resist this by affirming their current state and retroactively justifying their past to avoid the unknown.
Respect is Contagious: Educators must model respect to teach it. This creates a “contagious” effect, building a community where others adopt the same attitude.
Topics
The Problem: Vertical Relationships & Sympathy
The session began by challenging the traditional teacher-student dynamic, which is often vertical (authority-based).
This model fosters sympathy (agreeing with feelings) instead of true empathy.
The Youth character in the book argued that educators must prioritise scholastic results, not empathy, to be considered effective.
The Solution: Horizontal Relationships & Empathy
The Philosopher advocated for horizontal relationships in which teachers and students interact as equals.
Empathy Defined: A skill that involves imagining another’s life to understand their perspective and motivations.
Contagious Respect: Modelling respect is the first step. Like a torch on a dark road, it shows others a path, eventually inspiring a community of shared respect.
The Rationale: Teleology & The Subjective Past
The core of Adlerian psychology is teleology—the belief that behaviour is driven by present goals rather than past causes.
Example: A person claims a “dark personality” due to a bad home environment (aetiology). Adlerian view: they chose that personality to achieve the goal of avoiding hurt (teleology).
The past is a subjective narrative constructed by the “self now” to justify current choices.
Example: A student who thanks a strict teacher later is affirming their current success and retroactively painting the past in a positive light to justify it.
The Challenge: Why Change is Difficult
Change is difficult because it requires “death” of the old self—abandoning past habits and identities.
This is a frightening prospect, so people often choose to affirm their current state, however unsatisfactory, to avoid the unknown.
The Youth character’s resentment toward past teachers was interpreted as a way to justify an unsatisfactory “self now” by blaming the past.
Q&A: Clarifying “Human Beings Can Determine Themselves”
Question (Vishaaka, Grade 6): What does “human beings can determine themselves at any time” mean?
Answer (Sandeep Dutt): Your thoughts shape your present moment. By managing your thoughts, you can manage your life. This requires aligning your mind, consciousness, and thought.
Next Steps
All Participants:
Review the session recording and notes on www.
happyteacher.inJoin the next Masterclass on March 14.
- FATHOM-AI Notes, read with care.