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    Home » The Courage to Be Disliked urges living in the present
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    The Courage to Be Disliked urges living in the present

    May 10, 2026

    DUBAI, UAE / MENA Newswire / — The Courage to Be Disliked, a dialogue-driven self-help book by Japanese authors Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga, has become a widely read introduction to Adlerian psychology, arguing that personal freedom often begins where approval seeking ends. First published in Japan in 2013 and later issued in English-language editions, the book matters because it offers a practical vocabulary for boundaries, conflict, and responsibility in work, friendship, and love.

    Community feeling and contribution frame the book’s definition of happiness now.
    Community feeling and contribution frame the book’s definition of happiness now. (Representative Image)

    Structured as five extended conversations between a philosopher and a skeptical young man, the book uses the back-and-forth to stress-test its claims rather than simply announce them. The dialogue format keeps returning to one question: whether a reader’s explanations are descriptions of reality or habits that protect them from risk. That method, more than inspirational language, is what gives the book its persuasive power.

    At its core, the authors challenge determinism. Painful experiences are treated as real, but not as a life sentence. The book argues that people are guided by present purposes as much as by past causes, and that the meaning assigned to earlier events can be revised. In that framework, the key obstacle is not an unchangeable personality, but the reluctance to step into uncertainty and accept the courage that change requires.

    The dialogue’s most controversial moments come when it treats emotion as chosen behavior with a function. Anger is framed not as an uncontrollable explosion but as a tool people may use, consciously or not, to dominate a situation or silence disagreement. Anxiety and other symptoms are discussed in similar terms, as explanations that can protect a person from exposure, failure, or rejection. The book’s intent is not to shame readers, but to insist that agency exists even in uncomfortable patterns.

    Rivalry and status anxiety as relationship fuel

    The book also places interpersonal dynamics at the center of most distress, focusing on comparison and judgment. Inferiority is presented as universal and, when handled honestly, a driver of growth. The problem begins when inferiority becomes an identity and an excuse, or when a person compensates through displays of superiority. The authors’ alternative is to reject rivalry altogether, treating progress as movement from one’s current position rather than a contest to defeat others.

    The most actionable concept is what the book calls separation of tasks, a boundary test that asks who ultimately bears the consequences of a choice. When consequences belong to someone else, the book argues, attempts to control the outcome typically create resentment and power struggles. Applied to recognition, the logic is blunt: a person can control their conduct, but not another person’s judgment. For this reviewer, that single distinction is the book’s sharpest tool, because it converts abstract advice about “not caring” into a workable decision rule.

    A practical way to stop over-explaining

    Another counterintuitive argument targets both rebuke and praise. Rebuke is an obvious attempt to control behavior, but the book warns that praise can also create a vertical relationship in which one person evaluates and the other performs for approval. The recommended alternative is encouragement, language that acknowledges effort and contribution without ranking human worth. The aim is a horizontal relationship model, where roles may differ but equality is protected, reducing the pressure to win, submit, or seek constant validation.

    In its closing sections, The Courage to Be Disliked links happiness to what Adler called community feeling: honest self-acceptance, trust without guarantees, and contribution that does not depend on applause. The book’s final demand is also its simplest: life is not something that begins after success, but something lived in the present through repeated choices. Readers may disagree with the book’s harder claims, but its practical framework is consistent, and its central challenge remains clear: freedom includes accepting that some people will dislike you.

    Book review by: Ajay Rajguru, Founder and CEO of MENA Newswire, a multilingual content syndication network operating across six continents. He also oversees Newszy, Integrated Identity, ConSynSer, MEAPMP and CryptoWire, focused on AI, machine learning, ad-tech and content engagement.
    Disclosure: The reviewer purchased the book; no publisher or author sponsorship was involved.

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