Read And Lead: Masterclass 2026: Reading from the book The Courage To Be Disliked by Fumitake Koga and Ichiro Kishimi, with Sandeep Dutt.
Discuss Adlerian psychology concepts from The Courage to Be Disliked.
Key Takeaways
- Horizontal Relationships: Establish relationships as equals to foster trust and shared responsibility, replacing vertical hierarchies that create dependency and enable responsibility-shirking.
- Worth on the Level of Being: Value people for their existence, not just their actions. This mindset enables gratitude for all, including newborns and the bedridden, and provides a foundation for self-worth.
- Self-Acceptance vs. Self-Affirmation: Accept your current self (e.g., a 60% score) as a starting point for improvement, rather than using false positivity (self-affirmation) that can lead to a superiority complex.
- Courage to Be Disliked: Overcome self-consciousness and the fear of judgment by acting authentically. This courage is the key to building genuine relationships and achieving happiness.
- Topics
The Problem: Self-Consciousness & Vertical Relationships
The Youth's self-consciousness (fear of judgment) prevents authentic expression, creating a "straitjacket" that stifles their "innocent self."
This fear is rooted in vertical relationships, which create hierarchies and dependency.
Example: Following a boss's orders to avoid conflict and then blaming the boss for failure is a "life lie" that shirks personal responsibility.
The Youth feels worthless because their job (sorting books) is unskilled and replaceable, leading them to believe they are "no one else but me" and not uniquely needed.
The Solution: Horizontal Relationships & Worth on the Level of Being
Horizontal Relationships: Treat all people as comrades and equals in consciousness.
Rationale: A single genuine horizontal relationship can transform one's entire lifestyle, gradually making all other interactions horizontal.
Practicality: This is about mindset, not ignoring social structures. It means asserting oneself respectfully and taking responsibility.
Worth on the Level of Being: Value a person's existence, not just their actions.
Rationale: This counters the Youth's initial view that worth derives solely from being "of use," thereby devaluing newborns, the elderly, and the bedridden.
Example: A mother in critical condition is still "of use" by being alive, providing psychological support to her family.
Gratitude: Express gratitude for existence itself, not just for specific acts.
Example: Instead of comparing a child to a perfect ideal and subtracting points, start from zero and be grateful for who they are.
The Path Forward: Self-Acceptance & Contribution
Community Feeling: The ultimate goal of interpersonal relationships.
Components: Self-acceptance, confidence in others, and contribution to others.
Action: "Someone has to start." You must initiate cooperation without waiting for others.
Self-Acceptance vs. Self-Affirmation:
Self-Affirmation: False positivity ("I am 100%") that can lead to a superiority complex.
Self-Acceptance: Honestly accepting your current self (e.g., a 60% score) as a starting point for improvement.
Principle: Focus on what you can change and accept what you cannot. This is "affirmative resignation," echoing the Serenity Prayer.
Next Steps
All Participants:
Apply the principle of self-acceptance by focusing on what you can change and accepting what you cannot.
Practice building horizontal relationships by treating others as equals in consciousness.
Cultivate the "courage to be disliked" to overcome self-consciousness and act authentically.