Look at Me: A Field Guide to Human Self-Deception - Tapa blanda

Creel Jr, Mr Gerald P; Creel Jr, Gerald P

 
9798296042002: Look at Me: A Field Guide to Human Self-Deception

Sinopsis

A Hilarious Field Guide to Self-Deception

Ever wonder why your coworker who humble-brags about being "too much of a perfectionist" never actually improves? Or why the person lecturing about authenticity seems most performative? Welcome to humanity's grand theater of absurdity.

Look at Me is your diagnostic manual for everyday psychological theater—a streetwise DSM for performance disorders plaguing modern interaction. This comprehensive taxonomy organizes 61 distinct patterns of performative mediocrity into seven clusters:

INTELLECTUAL PERFORMANCE: Malapropism Monarchs ruling through ignorance, Documentary Doctorate sufferers becoming experts after one Netflix special, Intellectual Peacocks displaying unread wisdom.

MORAL SUPERIORITY: Dashboard Divinity Syndrome, Wellness Warrior Delusion, Mindfulness Materialism Paradox—watch virtue become competitive advantage.

VICTIM PERFORMANCE: Victimhood Arbitrage Complex, Trauma Tourism, Emotional Labor Embezzlement—suffering as social currency.

IDENTITY COSPLAY: Curated Authenticity for social media, Genealogical Costume Syndrome—identity as costume changes.

POLITICAL THEATER: T-Shirt Activism, Hashtag Heroism, Revolutionary Dependency Paradox—rebels dependent on systems they oppose.

STATUS DISPLAY: Wealth Worship Broadcasting, Humble Brag Paradox, Disenfranchised Millionaire Syndrome.

CONSEQUENCE AVOIDANCE: Choice-Consequence Disconnection, Retroactive Wisdom Syndrome, the ultimate Attention Seeking Meta-Syndrome.

Unlike traditional disorders affecting few, these syndromes are democratically distributed. Most qualify for multiple diagnoses simultaneously. These aren't character flaws—they're systematic self-deception patterns normalized into social virtues.

The beautiful irony? Recognizing these patterns in others becomes its own form of the pattern. Anyone reading this spots behaviors in everyone else while remaining unaware of their own participation.

Author, Gerald P. Creel Jr. brings insight through an interdisciplinary background spanning literature, psychology, history, business, and education. As educator and civic leader, he observes these syndromes daily. His recognition that writing about self-deception is itself self-deception makes him the perfect unreliable narrator.

This isn't written from superiority but shared complicity in human comedy. We're all performing the same show. Recognizing the script doesn't make us less likely to deliver our lines—just makes it more amusing.

Perfect for readers enjoying sharp social commentary with philosophical depth, psychology with humor, anyone wondering why people are reliably ridiculous.

The real wisdom isn't avoiding these patterns (impossible unless dead), but recognizing them and occasionally laughing at our psychological theater.

Direct Self-Help

Tired of self-help books that promise transformation but deliver platitudes? This isn't that book. Look at Me is a brutally honest mirror revealing the psychological games we all play—the ones keeping you stuck while feeling virtuous about it.

Through 61 meticulously documented patterns of self-deception, you'll recognize the scripts you're running on autopilot: the humble-brags masking insecurity, the victim narratives avoiding responsibility, the moral superiority hiding mediocrity.

The twist? Reading this book is itself a form of the pattern. But awareness—even imperfect, ironic awareness—is the first step toward genuine change. You won't fix yourself by finishing this book. But you'll stop fooling yourself about why you're not changing. And that uncomfortable honesty is worth more than a thousand affirmations.

For readers ready to laugh at their own psychological theater while actually learning something useful.

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