What does come to your mind when you think of self-awareness? A concept, praised well and always presented as an unqualified good. Moreover, we do not only wish it for self but also look for it in others, and condemn those who seem to lack it. However, this concept is hardly new, as in the fifth century BCE, this concept of ‘Know thyself' was inscribed on the Temple of Apollo. So, with the passage of time, self-awareness has become one of those virtues we rarely think to question.
I guess, it is worth challenging such broad consensual idea. So, being a devil’s advocate, I wish to explore how self-awareness can go wrong; how it can also make our lives significantly worse.
So let us move forward
In modern discourse, there exist a familiar idea called analysis paralysis: thinking so much that action never happens, where over-planning results in procrastination. We tend to focus so much on the issue that even simple behavior starts to feel unnatural.
As depicted in ‘No Longer Human’, the protagonist cannot act spontaneously because he constantly imagines how others perceive him. Life becomes a circus. His tragedy is not lack of reflection, but too much of it. Self-awareness becomes so intense that it cuts him off from his instincts.
You know that feeling when you think so much about life that you forget to actually live it?
A lot of traditions have warned about that. In Zen Buddhism, monks use techniques - those strange, impossible riddles - not to make you smarter, but to exhaust your overthinking. It is like when you are trying to fall asleep and the more you think about sleeping, the more awake you become. Zen basically says, stop trying so hard to figure everything out. Just be!
Even Nietzsche hinted that constantly asking, “What is the meaning of life?” might not always be deep. Sometimes, it is a sign that you are standing on the sidelines. Think of a footballer who keeps analyzing the game instead of actually kicking the ball. At some point, this analysis becomes nothing less than avoidance.
Mastery is not about thinking through every move. It is about habit. Imagine learning to drive. At first, you consciously think: clutch, gear, break, mirror. But once you are experienced, you just drive. The moment you start overthinking every tiny action again, you stall. And that tiny skill collapses under too much awareness.
And then there is self-awareness turning into self-criticism.
In this situation, we start seeing ourselves the way we imagine others see us. Like when you suddenly become hyper aware of how you are walking because you think someone is watching. You stiffen; you become unnatural. With the passage of time, we carry that ‘imaginary audience' inside our heads. We judge ourselves before anyone else gets the chance.
Contemporary culture makes this worse. We are told to constantly improve: better body, better career, better mindset. But hidden inside ‘self-improvement' is often quiet self-rejection. It is like saying, “I will finally be acceptable, once I upgrade myself”. That is not humility. That is a subtle form of self-obsession.
And yet, that same awareness protects us. It keeps us from blindly following crowds or falling into manipulation. It helps us question, think and grow.
The problem is not awareness itself. It is how we use it.
Søren Kierkegaard said that recognizing despair and agony might make you feel worse at first, but it is the first honest step toward healing. Like realizing you are lost. It is itchy and uncomfortable, but now you can actually look for a map.
So maybe the goal is not to think less. It is to think better. To catch when self-awareness quietly becomes self-attack.
Take self-awareness as a knife. It can carve something beautiful, or it can cut you. The real question is not ‘Should I be aware?’ It is ‘Is this awareness helping me live more fully, or just pulling me further into my head?’
Because sometimes, the deepest wisdom is stepping out of your thoughts.
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Do mention your thoughts.
Peace 🕊