Perceiving oneself as a major character in one's life story predicts well-being(sciencedirect.com)
sciencedirect.com
Perceiving oneself as a major character in one's life story predicts well-being
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0092656624000588
8 comments
To what degree does it make one vulnerable to social hacking? Cult recruitment tactics may work best on "narrative" people, for example.
I wonder what the genre of your own 'life movie' says about you? For a while I was a James Bond-type character in a spy movie, but then I became a protagonist in a Kafkaesque fantasy like The 5000 Fingers of Dr. T.
... which is an amazing film that you can see here
https://archive.org/details/the-5000-fingers-of-dr.-t.
https://archive.org/details/the-5000-fingers-of-dr.-t.
So my main character syndrome is actually a good thing? Sweet.
You're a main character in your story. You're not necessarily a main character in anyone else's story.
That sounds like what an NPC would say.
I ended up skimming this as it's very verbose. I was surprised in the discussion of confounding variables to see no discussion of whether the participants are just accurately describing reality.
If you asked Elon Musk to tell you his life story he'd tell you about what he's done. If you ask a warehouse worker their life story they might tell you about things people told them to do. But that's a lagging and pretty boring indicator.
If you asked Elon Musk to tell you his life story he'd tell you about what he's done. If you ask a warehouse worker their life story they might tell you about things people told them to do. But that's a lagging and pretty boring indicator.