Y12W45WR Enough, the quiet question
Examine your own sense of sufficiency — where you feel you have enough, where you feel you don’t — and reflect on what the pattern reveals about the life you’re building.
1Retrieval check
Q1.What does the hedonic-adaptation research show?
- AImprovements in circumstances produce lasting happiness gains
- BEmotional gains from improved circumstances fade as new conditions become baseline
- CAdaptation is impossible
- DHappiness is purely genetic
Q2.What’s the article’s caveat about the ‘enough’ question?
- AIt applies to everyone equally
- BIt’s a privileged question — genuine poverty cannot be philosophically dissolved; the question applies above basic security
- CIt’s a myth
- DIt only applies to the wealthy
Show answer key
Q1 → B. Emotional gains from improved circumstances fade as new conditions become baseline.This is why chasing incremental acquisition doesn’t translate into lasting wellbeing.
Q2 → B. It’s a privileged question — genuine poverty cannot be philosophically dissolved; the question applies above basic security.The question is for those who have baseline security; it isn’t a reply to material need.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Stimulus
- Hedonic adaptation; SDT (autonomy, competence, relatedness); cross-tradition ‘enough’ question.
- Scope
- Your own sense of sufficiency, within the security-above caveat.
- Method
- Where do you have enough; where don’t you; what distinguishes them.
- Thinking
- Analytical, not aspirational.
- Output
- A pattern + what it reveals about the life you are building.
3Pick nudge
Which areas of your life will reveal your sense of enough?
4Planner — for each of your picks
5Sentence stems
- I noticed that ___ when ___.
- The specific moment it stood out was ___.
- Before paying attention, I had been assuming ___.
- [Researcher’s] finding that ___ captures what I saw, because ___.
- The pattern across my cases is ___.
- What this tells me about [wider topic] is ___.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) I noticed that in some domains I have a clear and quiet sense of enough — my relationships with my closest friends are stable and I do not regularly think about acquiring ‘more’ in that category — while in others I have an ongoing drive that doesn’t resolve when I meet milestones. The specific moment it stood out was a week where I hit a personal-best in training and felt within four days that the previous level was my baseline and the new level required defence. (2) Before paying attention, I had been assuming that achievement resolved itself. (3) The hedonic-adaptation research captures what I was missing: the feeling of sufficiency is not about the level but about the relationship between the level and the needs that actually produce wellbeing. (4) Self-Determination Theory specifies these needs: autonomy, competence, relatedness. (5) The pattern across my domains is that I have a quiet enough in domains where relatedness and competence combine (close friendships, one area of study) and an unresolved hunger in domains where I am pursuing status cues (fitness numbers, external markers of performance) without the relational or purpose-embedded layer. (6) What this tells me about the life I am building is specific: the pattern predicts which pursuits will eventually satisfy me (the ones that build specific competences I care about regardless of who’s watching) and which will not (the ones that run on comparison or adaptation-driven re-baselining), and the architectural implication is that I should weight the first category more heavily in how I allocate my next few years.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- Names specific domains with a clear sufficiency diagnosis.
- Catches the ‘achievement resolves itself’ assumption.
- Applies hedonic adaptation and SDT with distinct roles.
- Identifies the pattern (competence + relatedness produces enough; status cues don’t).
- Keeps the reflection analytical — no moralising.
- Ends with an architectural implication for allocation, not a motivational aphorism.
- 选择某一选项会使整个页面刷新。
- 在新窗口中打开。