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technique of being happy as a human being. The
technique of the cure follows as a logical consequence :
it lies in the art of building bridges to one’s fellow-men,
and in the courageous affirmation of life.
We have intimated that the need for security is the
reason for the existence of society and civilization. Very
often, however, an individual becomes panic-stricken
because he senses his insecurity so deeply. More often
than not, he is ignorant of the natural and easy way to
attain security—that is, by being a socially adjusted human
being, and he looks to his private and uniquely individual
defences to give him a greater plus of security. He pro¬
ceeds to build walls about himself. The more walls he
builds, the more anxious he becomes, and the more
anxious he is, the higher he builds his walls. This is the
vicious circle of isolation. The tragedy of these people
is that they sometimes succeed in walling themselves in so
completely that they not only keep out all danger, but
also light, food, life, and love—the very things that
could bring them happiness. If the defences are battered
down by fortune (and they usually arej, all is lost. If
fate deals unkindly with an individual who has built his
bridges according to the second diagram, he remains
relatively secure and happy. The Great War proved
conclusively that in the war between armaments and
allies, the allies eventually win.
Symptoms of the Inferiority Complex
How can you recognize whether you have an inferiority
complex ? A whole volume might be written about the
complicated manifestations of this almost universal
phenomenon. The inferiority complex reveals itself in
all human situations in which an individual is naturally
placed in a position of greater danger, or in situations
demanding a definitely social adjustment. Our assump¬
tion is indicated by the facts. One of the simplest situa¬
tions in which an individual senses his isolation most
keenly—in which therefore the experience of complete