This Is Us

The Difference Between Self-Discipline and Self-Denial

Why some of us can’t bear to use the beautiful things we own

Manoush Zomorodi
Human Parts
Published in
5 min readJan 8, 2021

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Photo: Kelly Sikkema/Unsplash

I just learned the word “anhedonia.” It means the inability to experience pleasure. Writers have been using the term a lot recently (15,700 results came up when I searched for it in Google News) to describe one of Covid’s long term effects on mental health. Over the weekend, I came across anhedonia in a New York Times article, which linked it to another good vocab word: anosmia, or the loss of smell.

Smell is intimately tied to both taste and appetite, and anosmia often robs people of the pleasure of eating. But the sudden absence also may have a profound impact on mood and quality of life. Studies have linked anosmia to social isolation and anhedonia, an inability to feel pleasure, as well as a strange sense of detachment and isolation.

I definitely don’t have anhedonia. But the word has led me to mull over a related attribute that I’d always considered a strength: The ability to delay pleasure or gratification. Let’s call it self-discipline. You’re likely familiar with the Marshmallow Test, the 1972 psychological experiment by psychologist Walter Mischel, which measured how long preschoolers could keep from scarfing down marshmallows placed in front of…

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Manoush Zomorodi
Human Parts

Journalist, mom, Swiss-Persian New Yorker. Host of @NPR’s @TEDRadioHour + @ZigZagPod. Author of Bored+Brilliant. Media Entrepreneur-ish. ManoushZ.com/newsletter