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No, that's just negative versus positive framing. Of course positive framing sounds better - it always does. Internal versus external would be more like 'the whole world is against me' versus 'i am to blame for everything bad in my life'. Both are negative, but one is internal loc and one is external. Or 'I need help to overcome a challenge' versus 'I need to overcome this challenge without help' or even 'other people cannot help me'.
The difference you’re failing to understand is that “I need to overcome this challenge without help” can be utterly self-defeating if, in fact, assistance is needed to make progress.
No one I’m aware of is advocating “go it alone.”
If you think the advocates of radical self-responsibility and an internal locus of control are preaching an avoidance of seeking external help when sensible, then I think you’re misunderstanding the message.
The point is to avoid blaming external things and to take maximum control of one’s life, not to only use one’s own capacities ever.
Yes. But that doesn't make it not Internal Locus of Control.
You're right that advocates don't phrase their ideology in that way. Advocates of this kind of 'born alone, die alone' individualism rarely phrase it in those exact terms, and frame it positively, in terms of independence and self-mastery, rather than in terms of isolation and self-blame.
Going to the doctor because you broke your leg is orthogonal to the internal locus of control issue of blaming someone else for your problems or solely relying on others.
You don’t understand what the advocates are advocating and I assure you it is not the idea that one should never seek external assistance.
Internal locus of control != absolute self-reliance.
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