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Acclaimed clinical psychologist Jordan B Peterson has influenced the modern understanding of personality, and now he has become one of the world’s most popular public thinkers, with his lectures on topics from the Bible to romantic relationships to mythology drawing tens of millions of viewers. In an era of unprecedented change and polarizing politics, his frank and refreshing message about the value of individual responsibility and ancient wisdom has resonated around the world.
In this book, he provides twelve profound and practical principles for how to live a meaningful life, from setting your house in order before criticising others to comparing yourself to who you were yesterday, not someone else today. Happiness is a pointless goal, he shows us. Instead we must search for meaning, not for its own sake, but as a defence against the suffering that is intrinsic to our existence.
Drawing on vivid examples from the author’s clinical practice and personal life, cutting-edge psychology and philosophy, and lessons from humanity’s oldest myths and stories, 12 Rules for Life offers a deeply rewarding antidote to the chaos in our lives: eternal truths applied to our modern problems.
ASIN : B01FPGY5T0
Publisher : Random House Canada
Accessibility : Learn more
Publication date : January 23, 2018
Language : English
File size : 19.4 MB
Screen Reader : Supported
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
X-Ray : Enabled
Word Wise : Enabled
Print length : 416 pages
ISBN-10 : 9780345816047
ISBN-13 : 978-0345816047
Page Flip : Enabled
Book 1 of 2 : 12 Rules for Life

Jason Lee –
The most influential book I have read this year! From a liberal.
I will admit this right off the bat. I knew nothing of Jordan Peterson, or any of his ideology before reading this book. I must have existed in a vacuum, as I merely picked this book up as it was given as an “Amazon Recommends.”Curious about the title, I purchased on impulse.I am very glad I did.I am not Jordan Peterson’s “supposed” target audience. (I used supposed because I don’t think he actually claims to have one).I am a liberal, Asian, left leaning moderate with a background in philosophy, theology and film studies. I support the women’s right movement, equal pay, and I find the Republican party of today rather distasteful for the anti-science movement they espouse.That being said, this book spoke to me. It is not an easy read. I had to re-read chapters slowly to fully condense my thoughts. I agree with the critical review that stated you have to be intellectually equipped to really get the most out of this. I had to utilize my background in philosophy and religion to go beyond the surface of what the author was trying to say. This is not a book you can listen to at 2x speed on Audible and hope to retain anything, imo. You need to digest this.That being said…Peterson’s deft weaving of theology, mythology, and just overall cogent arguments and viewpoints made me really respect and open up my mind to things I never fully thought about. I find it laughable that a Harvard professor/psychologist has been embraced by the “alt-right” when even a moderately close reading of this text repudiates all that they stand for.Peterson is direct. He has opinions. I don’t always agree with them. But he is genuinely expressing himself, and the belief that we should all try to be better. We should all try to be more compassionate, and most of all, we all should try to understand our humanity a little more each and every there.There’s no division in this book; there’s just deep anguish at the current state of humanity and its capacity for evil. There’s some exasperation at the way things are currently constructed in society that is in many ways lost. And most of all, there’s compassion and a belief that if we all got together in a room and truly talked, the world would be a better place.I would shy away from the noise around Peterson in the headlines, on Youtube, and in how the idealogues use him (or even his own personal media narrative) to justify their twisted beliefs. Don’t let the fact that the “Alt-Right” has co-opted this man to make him a mascot.Just read the book independently and make your own judgments. You’ll be glad you did.
Alex –
This book = 12 Rules (rock solid advice) + Peterson’s Philosophic musings
Jordan Peterson is a beacon of light in this chaotic world, a psychologist whose writing combines science and common sense. One of his talents is his ability to articulate complex ideas to a wide audience. Regardless of whether you have a background in psychology or not, you will understand this book. It covers his twelve rules for life, which are intended not only as a guide for life of the individual, but as a remedy for societyâs present ills. Peterson believes that the cure for society starts with curing the individual, the smallest unit of society. Petersonâs well-known advice to clean your room is a reflection of the truth that if you canât even manage the most basic and mundane responsibilities of life, then you have no business dictating to others how to fix society.One of the main themes of this book is: Personal change is possible. There’s no doubt you can be slightly better today than you were yesterday. Because of Pareto’s Principle (small changes can have disproportionately large results), this movement towards the good increases massively, and this upward trajectory can take your life out of hell more rapidly than you could believe. Life is tragic and full of suffering and malevolence. But there’s something you can start putting right, and we can’t imagine what good things are in store for us if we just fix the things that are within our power to do so.The 12 Rules for Life:In Petersonâs own words, itâs 12 rules to stop you from being pathetic, written from the perspective of someone who himself tried to stop being pathetic and is still working on it. Peterson is open about his struggles and shortcomings, unlike many authors who only reveal a carefully curated façade.Rule 1: Stand up straight with your shoulders back. People have bad posture, and the meaning behind it can be demonstrated by animal behaviors. Peterson uses the example of the lobster. When a lobster loses a fight, and they fight all the time, it scrunches up a little. Lobsters run on serotonin and when he loses, levels go down, and when he wins, levels go up and he stretches out and is confident. Who cares? We evolutionarily diverged from lobsters 350 million years ago, but itâs still the same circuit. Itâs a deep instinct to size others up when looking at them to see where they fit in the social hierarchy. If your serotonin levels fall, you get depressed and crunch forward and youâre inviting more oppression from predator personalities and can get stuck in a loop. Fixing our posture is part of the psycho-physiological loop that can help you get started back up again.Rule 2: Treat yourself like someone you are responsible for helping. People often have self-contempt whether they realize it or not. Imagine someone you love and treat well. You need to treat yourself with the same respect. Take care of yourself, your room, your things, and have respect for yourself as if youâre a person with potential and is important to the people around you. If you make a pattern of bad mistakes, your life gets worse, not just for you, but for the people around you. All your actions echo in ways that cannot be imagined. Think of Stalinâs mother and the mistakes she made in life, and how the ripple effects went on to affect the millions of people around him.Rule 3: Choose your friends carefully. It is appropriate for you to evaluate your social surroundings and eliminate those who are hurting you. You have no ethical obligation to associate with people who are making your life worse. In fact, you are obligated to disassociate with people who are trying to destroy the structure of being, your being, societyâs being. Itâs not cruel, itâs sending a message that some behaviors are not to be tolerated.Rule 4: Compare yourself to who you were yesterday, not to who someone else is today. You need to improve, and you may even be in real bad shape, but many unfairly compare themselves to some more seemingly successful person. Up till around age 17, random comparisons to other people can make sense, but afterwards, especially age 30+, our lives become so idiosyncratic that comparisons with others become meaningless and unhelpful. You only see a slice of their life, a public facet, and are blind to the problems they conceal.Rule 5: Don’t let children do things that make you dislike them. You aren’t as nice as you think, and you will unconsciously take revenge on them. You are massively more powerful than your children, and have the ability and subconscious proclivity for tyranny deeply rooted within you.If you don’t think this is true, you don’t know yourself well enough. His advice on disciplinary procedure: (1) limit the rules. (2) use minimum necessary force and (3) parents should come in pairs.It’s difficult and exhausting to raise children, and it’s easy to make mistakes. A bad day at work, fatigue, hunger, stress, etc, can make you unreasonable.Rule 6: Set your house in perfect order before you criticize the world. Life is tragic and there’s malevolence. There’s plenty to complain about, but if you dwell on it, you will become bitter and tread down a path that will take you to twisted places. The diaries of the Columbine killers are a chilling look into minds that dwelled on the unholy trinity of deceit, arrogance, and resentment) . So instead of cursing the tragedy that is life, transform into something meaningful. Start by stop doing something, anything, that you know to be wrong. Everyday you have choices in front of you. Stop doing and saying things that make you weak and ashamed. Do only those things that you would proudly talk about in public.Rule 7: Pursue what is meaningful (not what is expedient). Meaning is how you protect yourself against the suffering that life entails. This means that despite the fact that weâre all emotionally wounded by life, weâve found something that makes it all worthwhile. Meaning, Peterson says, is like an instinct, or a form of vision. It lets you know when youâre in the right place, and he says that the right place is midway between chaos and order. If you stay firmly ensconced within order, things you understand, then you canât grow. If you stay within chaos, then youâre lost. Expediency is what you do to get yourself out of trouble here and now, but it comes at the cost of sacrificing the future for the present. So instead of doing what gets you off the hook today, aim high. Look around you and see what you can make better. Make it better. As you gain knowledge, consciously remain humble and avoid arrogance that can stealthily creep on you. Peterson also says to be aware of our shortcomings, whatever they may be; our secret resentments, hatred, cowardice, and other failings. Be slow to accuse others because we too conceal malevolent impulses, and certainly before we attempt to fix the world.Rule 8: Tell the truthâor, at least, don’t lie. Telling the truth can be hard in the sense that itâs often difficult to know the truth. However, we can know when weâre lying. Telling lies makes you weak. You can feel it, and others can sense it too. Meaning, according to Peterson, is associated with truth, and lying is the antithesis of meaning. Lying disassociates you with meaning, and thus reality itself. You might get away with lying for a short while, but only a short time. In Petersonâs words âIt was the great and the small lies of the Nazi and Communist states that produced the deaths of millions of people.âRule 9: Assume that the person you are listening to might know something you don’t. A good conversation consists of you coming out wiser than you went into it. An example is when you get into an argument with your significant other, you want to win, especially if you get angry. If youâre more verbally fluent than the other person then you can win. One problem is that the other person might see something better than you, but they canât quite articulate it as well. Always listen because thereâs a possibility theyâre going to tell you something that will prevent you from running headfirst into a brick wall. This is why Peterson says to listen to your enemies. They will lie about you, but they will also say true things about yourself that your friends wonât. Separate the wheat from the chaff and make your life better.Rule 10: Be Precise in Your Speech: There is some integral connection between communication and reality (or structures of belief as he likes to say). Language takes chaos and makes it into a âthing.â As an example, imagine going through a rough patch in your life where you canât quite put your finger on whatâs wrong. This mysterious thing thatâs bothering youâis it real? Yes, if itâs manifesting itself as physical discomfort. Then you talk about it and give it a name, and then this fuzzy, abstract thing turns into a specific thing. Once named, you can now do something about it. The unnameable is far more terrifying than the nameable. As an example, the movie the Blair Witch project didnât actually name or describe the evil. Nothing happens in the movie, itâs all about the unnameable. If you canât name something, it means itâs so terrifying to you that you canât even think about it, and that makes you weaker. This is why Peterson is such a free speech advocate. He wants to bring things out of the realm of the unspeakable. Words have a creative power and you donât want to create more mark and darkness by imprecise speech.Rule 11: Donât bother children when they are skateboarding. This is mainly about masculinity. Peterson remembers seeing children doing all kinds of crazy stunts on skateboards and handrails, and believes this is an essential ingredient to develop masculinity, to try to develop competence and face danger. Jordan Peterson considers the act of sliding down a handrail to be brave and perhaps stupid as well, but overall positive. A lot of rebellious behavior in school is often called âtoxic masculinity,â but Peterson would say to let them be. An example would be a figure skater that makes a 9.9 on her performance, essentially perfect. Then the next skater that follows her seems to have no hope. But she pushes herself closer to chaos, beyond her competence, and when successful, inspires awe. Judges award her 10âs. Sheâs gone beyond perfection into the unknown and ennobled herself as well as humanity as well.Rule 12: Pet a cat when you encounter one on the street. This chapter is mainly autobiographical and he writes about tragedy and pain. When tragic things are in front of you and youâre somewhat powerless, you must keep your eyes open for little opportunities that highlight the redemptive elements of life that make it all worthwhile. The title of this chapter comes from his experience of observing a local stray cat, and watching it adapt to the rough circumstances around it. Another thing you must do when life is going to pieces is to shorten your temporal horizon. Instead of thinking in months, you maybe think in hours or minutes instead. You try to just have the best next minute or hour that you can. You shrink the time frame until you can handle it, this is how you adjust to the catastrophe. You try to stay on your feet and think. Although this chapters deals about harsh things, itâs an overall positive one. Always look for whatâs meaningful and soul-sustaining even when youâre where youâd rather not be.
Jack Kaz –
Dr. Peterson is surely one of the most thought-provoking psychologists/teachers/speakers of this day and age, and this book is the proof his (often controversial) theories are rooted in basic science, proper moral and religious values, and most of all, deep thought. Sure, his insightful deep-dives and prolonged analysis isn’t for the faint of heart, but those with the courage to read some of his explanations twice, appreciate his honesty, relate with his real-life examples, and really question some of their own approaches to life, will benefit tremendously from his 12 rules. While I don’t apply all of his rules religiously every single day, I sometimes remember some and they definitely help me tackle life’s odd situations with more confidence… and while standing up with my back straight…
Fam –
Excellent book! Highly recommend!
Camille –
Bzdurna ksiÄ Å¼ka dla znoszonych chyba realnoÅciÄ .
EQ Expert –
Following Jordan Petersonâs triumphant speaking tour of Australia I promised in my April 2018 newsletter that I would read and review his book â12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaosâ. I have now read the book but what I did not realise is that our paths had already crossed.On 6 May 2016, Peterson wrote a reply on Quora denying that EQ exists. Then on 2 March 2017 I wrote a comment to his blog saying that I, even as an EQ practitioner, agreed with most of Petersonâs reply. My comment was a repetition on my mantra that temperament is the key to lifting you EQ and that the most practical model of temperament is the 7MTF/Humm. I would commend the whole Quora conversation to you as it provides a very good insight into Petersonâs character.The book is worth reading. This quote from New Statesman sums up the book beautifully. âIt is that rare thing: self-help that might actually be helpful.â It is also worth watching the interview between Peterson and Cathy Newman. The cartoon attached with this blog says it all. Newman continuously tries to put words into Petersonâs mouth yet he demonstrates unbelievable self-control and constantly and logically rebuts her. Accordingly, I would regard his Regulator/Normal temperament component as high.Peterson is very stubborn as demonstrated by his defence of free speech in refusing to use gender-neutral pronouns despite the Canadian Government passing compelling legislation and publicly defending James Damore, the sacked Google employee who suggested there were innate gender differences. The book itself is a exceptionally creative piece of writing. Peterson leaps from the Bible to Dostoevsky to Nietzsche yet writes with clarity as he explains the logic behind his 12 rules. There is perhaps a little too much Jung and Freud for me but Peterson has spent 20 years as a psychotherapist so such an emphasis is understandable. So, one has to conclude his Artist component is also at the high end of the spectrum. He particularly defends the personal liberty of the individual against the proponents of radical identity politics.Finally I read that he suffered from clinical depression. This might be hearsay but Peterson also has a lot of the Doublechecker component in his temperament. In the last chapter Peterson describes the personal struggles he and his family went through when they discovered his daughter, Mikhaila, had a rare bone disease. It is an incredibly compassionate piece of writing. He believes that searching for happiness is a fruitless aim. Instead he says that what we have to do is learn to walk the line between masculine order and feminine chaos.Normally you do not find ADs becoming the centre of attention. However the high intelligence and strong self-control of Peterson are great strengths. Also his use of social media (his YouTube channel contains 40 hours of lectures) and his political positioning has brought him deserved fame. Last month the New Yorker published a review of his book: Jordan Petersonâs Gospel of Masculinity. Great title but the author, Kelefa Sanneh, does not seem to me to really understand what makes Peterson tick.
Anonymous –
This book is a great work of art. It guides you to accept human fate; the fact that we are natural born into chaos and we find meaning in life by struggling to maintain order.