I wonder how you would have responded if I had not linked to the Litany of Gendlin wiki article. I wasn't trying to say that reciting things is an ultrapowerful effect on disposition (though it might be anyway), just that facing reality even if it's difficult is one of Less Wrong's goals.
Every cause wants to be a cult: simply claiming to want to face reality as it is is rather weak evidence about actually working for it, or even actually wanting to. Many, if not most, people claim to want to face reality as it is, even when they actually don't. "This group doesn't actually want to face reality" is the overwhelming default expectation for any group, which requires much stronger evidence than claims of the contrary to be seriously doubted.
That's the outside view for LW. As for the inside view, well, I might be overgeneralizing from...
He has resumed posting at his blog Chronopause and he is essential reading for those interested in cryonics and, more generally, rational decision-making in an uncertain world.
In response to a comment by a LW user named Alexander, he writes:
(Sidenote: This reminds me of what Luke considers his most difficult day-to-day tasks.)
On a related note, Carl Shulman has said that more widespread cryonics would encourage more long-term thinking, specifically about existential risk. Is it a consensus view that this would be the case?
Every now and then people ask LW what sort of career they should pursue if they want to have a large impact improving the world. If we agree that cryonics would encourage long-term thinking, and that this would be beneficial, then it seems to me that we should push some of these people towards the research and practice of brain preservation. For example, perhaps http://80000hours.org/search?q=cryonics should have some results.