We Do Not Move Unless We Are Bothered
Why we do what we do?
We do not move unless we are bothered. Every single human motion is caused by a bothersome. We remain motionless if nothing bothers us.
Imagine sitting on the sofa in your living room, completely comfortable, with nothing at all to bother you. You are not hungry, thirsty, or tired. You are not cold, hot, or sick. You are not worried about bills coming due or your job or business. You are not bored or sleepy. The telephone does not ring, and absolutely nothing makes you uncomfortable, worried, curious, excited, or upset. You are continuously calm and comfortable sitting on that sofa. Would you make any movement if nothing bothered you?

We always want to be in balance. Discomforts and problems bother us and generate an imbalance in us, and as a result, we move to regain our balance. Suffering and joy always accompany every motion. Life is nothing but the recurrent imbalance (suffering) and balance (enjoyment). If we eliminate discomforts and problems from our lives, we will become motionless.
You lose your balance when you see a hair on your pillow, so you remove the hair to regain your balance.
When you see a poor man, you either lose your balance and give him some money to regain your balance, or you do not lose your balance enough to spend money on him. Only two factors are involved in this scenario. The joy of regaining your balance (enjoyment) and the discomfort of spending money (suffering). Your brain evaluates the level of enjoyment and suffering, and the sum of the outcome of enjoyment and suffering determines your motion. 
Our brain constantly evaluates the levels of enjoyment and suffering in each action, and we perform motions where there is more enjoyment or less suffering. In other words, the sum of the outcome of our enjoyment (want) and suffering (fear) determines our action. 

Eddie Rafii discovered seven major facts in human nature underlying every single human motion:
Fact 1- We always want to be in balance.
Fact 2- We make motions only when we lose our balance.  
Fact 3- Loss of balance always generates want or fear in us.
Fact 4- Suffering and joy always accompany every motion.  
Fact 5- More suffering leads to more enjoyment.
Fact 6-The sum of the outcome of our want and fear determines our motion.
Fact 7-The degrees of our personality and physical characteristics, and mental and environmental conditions, determine the levels of our enjoyments and sufferings, and the sum of the outcomes of those enjoyments and sufferings determine our motions. So, what does that say about human nature? 

Scientific experiments prove that actions and reactions are chemical, not psychological. Feelings constitute a certain chemical process in the brain.
Depression, anxiety, mania, and other so-called mental disorders result from a chemical imbalance.

The above discoveries opened a new window into the world of psychology. This book is an advanced, powerful tool for analyzing human actions and reactions.




     REVOLUTIONARY DISCOVERIES IN                   HUMAN BEHAVIOR

The psyche is a myth.

Actions and reactions are chemical, not psychological. According to author Eddie Rafii, depression, anxiety, mania—and other so-called mental disorders—are the result of chemical imbalance. So what does that say about human nature?

Behaviology, a revolutionary new branch of science analyzing human behavior, postulates that wants and desires (joy) inspire you to move; suffering (fear) keeps you immobile. Your motions are based on the tipping of the balance between enjoyment and suffering. Rafii lays out seven facts about human motion:

  • We always want to be comfortable (balanced).
  • We move only when we lose our balance.
  • Loss of balance leads to motivation.
  • Every motion is associated with suffering and joy.
  • More suffering leads to more joy.
  • The outcome of want and fear determines motion.
  • Personality, physicality, and mental and environmental conditions determine desires and fears, and we move based on the sum of the outcomes of those desires and fears.

Assuming these seven facts, the conclusions are simple:

1. We do not perform motions based on the freedom of choice, the outcomes of our wants, and fears determines our motions.

2. Happiness as a feeling of continuous joy, doesn’t exist. It’s rather a temporary joy followed by suffering.

Intrigued? Open your mind, open Behaviology, and prepare for a paradigm shift that will change your life.