Sometimes I think that I made a mistake selecting psychology. It is so emotionally taxing. Architecture would have been easier. Engineering would have been easier. Anything not related to human emotions would have been easier. Being mentally healthy is a difficult task. Then I remember why I chose psychology. To make the world a better place. Not for others but for myself. It's a selfish reason. But where does the distinction between for yourself and for others lie? After all, are altruistic activities solely for other people? Does one not do them because it has personal benefits as well? Like relieving empathetic pain?
Moreover, pursuing psychology has had an underlying ambition of trying to make things and people go the way that I would like them to, the ideal ways that I think of, for me.
Although there has been this underlying ambition, I am not going to "force" clients to be and behave a certain way; I'll aid them in understanding their self, enlighten them, maybe show them a way for helping themselves, becoming better, because they have to do it and not me or there will be no true improvement. But it is my truth, my selfish truth.
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