Why do i hate competition




















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Oct 25, 2, Chicago, IL. I still occasionally get competitive or get some thrills out of testing myself, but I largely see competitive games as a venue to hang out or talk to people vs something that actually matters. My goal there is usually just to make the game interesting and exciting moreso than winning. Oct 27, 4, It's possible that you're the type of person who just shouldn't play competitive games.

Like how some people have tendencies towards alcoholism, and shouldn't drink alcohol. You should first try some anger management strategies to help prevent your blood pressure from rising during competitive games. If that doesn't work, then I think you have no choice but to just quit competitive games, and to try to get used to playing non-competitive games. Plenty of people play nothing but non-competitive games and get along just fine.

Mona Member. Oct 30, 25, TransEuropaExpress Member. Dec 6, 8, US. Mona said:. Clear Member. Oct 25, 1, Connecticut. I'm the same as you but it does not mean you are a bad person. I take it as a positive. Edit: I took this a bit past video games, but eh i stand by it.

Pomerlaw Erarboreal Member. Feb 25, 5, Ask yourself why do you need internet forum confirmation on this subject. Be yourself, work on yourself, try to be better, be happy. Hackworth Member. Oct 25, Paches Member.

I am a super competitive person who wants and tries to win at whatever game I am playing, but I am not a dick about it if I lose although I am internally frustrated if I know I screwed up.

You can still be positive about it and have good sportsmanship. The 2 aren't mutually exclusive. If I'm not invested in winning then I often feel no motivation to play at all. Any competitions I felt no desire to win in I simply just didn't partake in them.

Boogler Member. Dec 11, USA. I've always had the personal philosophy that being "competitive" is not only a desire to win, but an unwavering commitment to improvement.

That means learning from losses. That means no excuses. That means putting in the time. Being disappointed or frustrated when you lose is okay and can be understandable, but it's hard for me to have sympathy if you don't put in the effort. Someone who refuses to practice consistently and then constantly gets ass-pained to the point of self-harm over losing I do view as pretty immature. You need to decide for yourself what is important to you. If you refuse to put in the time and you just can't get over losing, my advice would be to not compete.

Oct 27, Based on your posts, I'm gonna suggest that you go see a therapist and work through these issues if you can. Much more productive than asking people on a forum or stewing in your own shame.

Oct 25, 13, Oct 27, 4, Edmonton. I don't think it makes you a bad person unless you're aggressive and a sore loser about it to the people you play with. It's more something that you'd want to work on for yourself. Oct 27, 1, They enter the workplace and they have little interest in leading in a hierarchical way. And they love to use the collaborative software that serves, unintentionally, to flatten the workplace hierarchy.

But Gen Yers are consumed with their image. Online, they manage themselves like they are celebrities. They revolutionized the art of the self-portrait because they take so many. And Gen Y women are renowned for dressing up at work in great clothes regardless of how much money they make or what the rest of the office is wearing.

So they elope , with a photographer, and post all the photos of a great wedding on Facebook. Gen Yers are scared of being screwed-over by corporate America because they saw their parents give up everything for corporate life and then get let down. Gen Yers do not want to repeat this in their own life.

So for Gen Yers, entrepreneurship is the ultimate expression of their conservatism. Gen Y thinks the safest route in employment is entrepreneurship, so in poll after poll, the vast majority of Gen Yers say they want to own their own business.

But what they really mean is they want to have a safety net. They want to feel like if they get laid off they will not be left high and dry like their parents were. In general, though, Gen Y likes working for someone else. Gen Y likes assignments, they like feedback, they like meetings, group efforts, and after-work happy-hours. These are all the trappings of people who work for someone else. Before I truly started competing in sports, I remember that I used to go out to play soccer with my friends all day every day.

Every time we went out to play all I used to think about was just how awesome of a time I was about to have with my friends.

I went out without worrying about a single thing in the world. We all simply played for fun, to entertain ourselves, without feeling the pressure or need to impress someone or live up to someone else's expectations. It was this way how I saw soccer, the sport I love, as my personal escape from reality to a sort of Utopian world where I could kick a ball around into a goal with my friends.

Nonetheless, when I grew up, I began playing not only soccer but other sports at a higher level with each passing day; and with each passing day, we, the players, were forced to take the game more seriously. We practiced for longer, trained harder, and the expectations from others rose quite steadily.

Don't get me wrong here, I'm not trying to encourage you to not try hard, the moment you don't feel like playing. Heck, if you love something enough to become obsessed with it, do it every day and be the best at it! You do you. Personally, however, I love working hard and getting better at different things, but only if I really do love those things.

Sadly, I can't deny the fact that at least for me, it almost seems that the more serious I take the things I play or do, the less fun they become. To put it in simpler terms "si algo no me nace, no lo hago porque simplemente lo voy a hacer peor", which roughly translates to: when you don't want to do something out of pleasure, you shouldn't do it because if you do, you will never do it as well as if you did it with pleasure; you'll just do it worse.

Thus, the moment I began playing sports with the purpose of simply competing rather than that of enjoying myself, was the moment I started losing pleasure to play those sports; and as a consequence, I became slightly worse at them. But why? I used to tell myself, "I've always been a competitive person, how can I not be enjoying myself as I did before?

What exactly is making me hate competition so much, to the point it affects my game? Instead, I like to compete for the sake of having a good time. It's like playing a board game. When people get together to play a board game, all of them want to win, however, the differences are that nobody is setting expectations on each other, and most importantly, the reason why they all gathered to play in the first place is that they simply want to have fun.

Not because they want to beat others, or because they want to win at all costs. Their ultimate want or intention is to just have a good time. In my eyes, playing a sport shouldn't be something that brings you stress, pressure or a sense of stringent obligation; in fact, it should be the complete opposite.

It should be something that brings you joy; something you are constantly looking forward to. Nonetheless, I've come to realize that whenever I compete with an excessive amount of competitiveness, my desire to play the sport slowly fades.

It's like when you listen to a song you love too many times. You eventually grow tired of it and you don't want to listen to it anymore. It works the same way with competition. Constant competition not only makes me get burnt out by the sports I love, but it also makes me lose the peaceful-happy mood that I usually have while playing them. I just think that something that is meant to be done for fun should not be overworked or seen as an obligation because when it happens it just stops being as fun as it once was.

A little competition is okay, but I also know for a fact that nothing done in excess can be good for you. Nowadays, many working adults, high school graduates, and retired lifelong learners are choosing to advance their careers, lives, and personal knowledge by completing school at home. The rising popularity of online college and graduate school degrees has completely changed the face of education and student life.

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