Saturday, July 3, 2010

Hedonic Adaptation is a great term

"Hedonic Adaptation" is what happens to you a few weeks after you buy that new car--you adapt to your new toy and it loses it's luster. Or if you move from drizzle Washington to sunny California. You'll be pumped for a while, but gradually you'll level out.

Maybe this is why rockstars and actors seemingly kill themselves more often than the general public. Can you adapt to getting everything you want all the time? Become numb to pleasure?

On the positive side, this term also refers to when life takes a turn for the worse. For instance, if you cut your finger off with a pruning shears, you will be severly depressed at first, but over time you will adapt to it. Yes, the loss of your finger will continue to suck; however, the suckiness will gradually decrease over time, and although you will never look back on your accident with fondness, you will learn to type, play tennis, etc, with four fingers.

Apparently, you can slow down this adaptation by taking breaks. So if you were Caligula of hedonic Rome, it would behoove you to take breaks during feasting, orgies, gladiatorial battles, and the like. Or in the modern day, take a break during a massage, between episodes of "Dexter", whatever.

For stuff you hate to do, on the other hand, just knock that out all at once. The pain starts off more intense, but as time goes by, decreases, right? Taking a long break in the middle of yard work or taxes is going to make the whole process that much worse... or so the theory goes.

BTW, I learned about hedonic adaptation from the book I just finished: The Upside of Irrationality

4 comments:

  1. Hey, is this the first comment on your blog? Am I the chosen one?

    I just finished your book "MetaGame" which I downloaded onto my iPad. I was going through a flurry of free downloads (mostly classics that are now Public Domain) and saw yours: "Hey, looks like sic-fi! Cool!" I was intrigued from page 1.

    Seems like most books these days follow some set plot pattern guaranteed to sell copies. You know, the murder detective mystery or two-dimensional fantasy story with an elf a dwarf and a princess. Oh, and a stone, sword, or ring of Power. Ugh.

    Your book was the most original and thought provoking I've read in a while. Perhaps since "Ender's Game". Reading about the technology at times felt more like looking into a crystal ball rather than reading a story. Interesting plot and characters, too. Good work, sir. More books to come? (Hope_Ful EmoticonTM).

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  2. PS I just realized my comment wasn't related to that specific blog post......

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  3. Yup, anitwave, you're the first, the chosen! Nice emoticon, BTW.

    Thanks for the props and I'm glad you appreciate some originality. It took me about 2 years of riding the bus to pull off that novel. I'm working on a fantasy novel now, but will likely return to the MetaGame universe afterward.

    Thanks,
    Sam

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  4. I bought a new RX-7 in early 1980, and was quite thrilled with the coolness. By summer, all I thought about was how I could customize it to make it cool again. New stereo? Pirelli tires and BBS wheels? Body mods? Turbo?

    How about just some old-fashioned self-control to cure my culturally instilled materialism?

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