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You are here: Home / Archives for Authenticity

Authenticity

Do you speak up? Where it matters?

By Diana Gardner Robinson Leave a Comment

On Speaking out

Sometimes many of us may incline to “lay low” and perhaps simmer quietly when things are not as we would like them to be. Yes, for a variety of reasons, we may choose not add our opinion to the mix. No matter why, we are withholding from whatever community is involved… and in fact they deserve to hear from us!

Perhaps we think people don’t want to hear from us, perhaps we fear being seen as “wrong,” or as “pushy” if we speak up. We may think that what we have to say is insignificant. 

For want of a Nail

When I was young my, my somewhat detail-oriented mother used to quote from a traditional saying:

For want of a nail, the horse-shoe was lost,
For want of the horse-shoe, the horse was lost,
For want of the horse, the rider was lost;
For want of the rider, the battle was lost,
For want of the battle, the war was lost;
For want of the war, the nation was lost.

Obviously she was trying to make the point that small details can matter – probably battling some form of carelessness on my part. Her point was that from small actions, or lack of action, major problems can arise. We see this in the horrible train crash on the west coast this week and in many traffic accidents.

One way in which most of us can “speak out” is in voting. My point is that when it comes to opinion, even to our voting, a great many people discount the value of their contribution although it really could make a difference. They think it is too small to matter, that people don’t want to hear from them, that they will look “pushy.” When election time comes around, many will point to wide differences between the votes received by two opponents in the past as evidence that their vote would have changed nothing. They see their vote as the equivalent of an irrelevant horse-shoe nail.

For Example

***Just how wrong they can be was demonstrated in the U.S. last week, and made additionally clear yesterday, after a recount was completed. Very simply, Shelly Simonds beat incumbent David Yancey by one vote, 11,608 to 11,607.***

And for want of one – or possibly two – votes, the party that had had control of a state House of Delegates for 17 years lost that control. Just one vote. Do you suspect that somewhere there are a few people who, through complacency, or laziness, or thinking that their vote would not make a difference, did not vote, are now wishing that they had done so? I wonder how they are feeling right now.

I have deliberately omitted naming the political parties involved, because that not relevant to my point. My point is that what YOU do, your opinion, your actions, matter. They matter not only in politics but in your community, not only in your community, but in every group in which you participate.

Persuasion

As a non-political example… When I was in graduate school, students in one class were assigned to read a specific research paper each week so that we could discuss it in the following seminar. One paper interested me hugely! It presented some issues that I had not encountered before, but that I agreed with very strongly. For some long-forgotten reason I was late for that seminar – really late. When I got there, the discussion of the paper was winding down. I was immediately asked what I thought of it, and why I thought that way. I bubbled over with enthusiasm, and considerable discussion continued, with some of the students becoming equally enthused, although the professor was unusually quiet.

As we ended, some of the students told me that he had started the seminar by strongly criticizing the paper, in which results that were reported ran contrary to his own opinions. Apparently, until I offered my comments, the students had been inclined to go along with his condemnation. Only when I explained what I saw as the paper’s “pluses” did they start to rethink what they had originally heard from the professor so that they looked at both sides of the question. Quite a few of them ended up agreeing with me.

What I learned

From that incident I learned one thing, and I still wonder about another.

What I learned was what I have written about earlier in this blog… One person’s opinion can matter, and can change other people’s minds, provided it is factual and expressed clearly.

For some fairly long periods of my life I had lived in environments where disagreeing about something was rarely welcomed, and did not often lead to any change of opinion by anyone. As a result, I learned to stay quiet (at least unless/until I happened to reach boiling point, which is not usually a constructive way to go about things). The experience in that seminar was one step toward me gaining confidence.

What I wonder…

But… suppose I had arrived at the beginning of the seminar, and had hear the professor’s diatribe against that paper and its author, what then? Would I have disputed his opinion, the opinion of the authority figure who would give me a grade at the end of the semester? I don’t know, but I certainly hope I would have spoken up, regardless of what he thought.

And I hope you will. Not just in politics, but with your point of view. Not with anger, not with name-calling, insults, or hostility, just with calm, and with solidly factual information on which your opinion is based…  It is based on solid facts…. Isn’t it?

What we’ve always done

Relative to solid facts, here’s an example that you may have heard before. It concerns the young bride who was cooking a pot-roast for the first time. Her helpful husband told her that his mother always cut off the two ends of the joint before placing it in the pot, so she did, although slightly puzzled. Later she asked his mother about that, and she replied that her mother had taught her how to cook, and that was the right way to prepare pot-roast.

Much later, invited for dinner at her grand-mother-in-law’s home, the young bride happened to be in the kitchen as grandma prepared a pot-roast. Shock! She watch as grandma put the roast into the pot without cutting anything.

Hesitantly, she asked grandma why she did not cut off the ends. She explained why she was asking. Grandma looked puzzled for a moment. Then she smiled,

“Oh,” she said, “yes, that’s right, I did. But eventually I bought a bigger pot and so I don’t have to do that any more.”

In other words, there was (now) no reason to wastefully cut off the ends of the roast, unless the bride’s cooking pot was also too small for the roast. The story is a perfect example of the “we’ve always done in that way” attitude that may stand in the way of progress. No one knows exactly why it is done this way, but it works okay, so why bother to consider a possible improvement? “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” is a motto that can get in the way of a great deal of progress. I have even known it used to shut down suggestions for contingency planning that could be vital in case of some kind of breakdown of a system.

What you know and think matters

If you find a better way, if you know something important that is relevant and based on facts, if you have an opinion on something that affects you or yours… then be proud to speak up. If you think that people are heading in the wrong direction, let them know. Not because you demand that they change their plans. Not because you have the right to control them. Just so that you can gently ensure that they know the facts on which your opinion is based. If they know them, and choose to ignore them, then that is on them, but at least you tried. Not solely (although importantly) as regards voting, but throughout your life and your community, you have the right to share the facts on which you base your opinions. You may make a positive contribution to their decision-making.

Just don’t be offended if they choose to go their own way. That is their right. (And, if they discover later that you were right, be kind – try not to remind them that you told them so.)

 

*** I wrote this on the day of the finding that the Virginia election was won by one vote. Following that, someone on the losing political party produced a ballot that had been discarded, took it to a panel of three judges (also members of the political party on the losing side), and they agreed that that ballot had been discarded  incorrectly and should therefore be counted. Thus, contrary to my mention above, the election ended in a tie, which will later be decided by a coin toss. You may feel that this supports the “my vote doesn’t matter” viewpoint, but I don’t think so. After all, consider how important that one “incorrect/correct” ballot was. 

 

 

Get to know Your Authentic Self

By Diana Gardner Robinson 5 Comments

The old adage KNOW THYSELF was indeed valuable advice. If we are not aware of the undercurrents that affect our life-voyage, then we cannot steer accordingly. Not knowing how our unconscious currents are affecting our decisions and our behavior, we may believe we are heading in one direction when in fact those conscious decisions are being subtly sabotaged at every turn by what we do not know about ourselves. While some people may need the help of a therapist if life has seriously harmed them, there are many steps that most of us can take ourselves.

1. Seek feedback. This can be difficult, for friends may not have the strength to risk hurting us by telling us the truth. Yet we can never know ourselves as others see us if they will not tell us what they see. To obtain honest feedback, the trick is to ask people in two categories; those who care for us so much that they are willing to risk our anger in order to help us, and those who know us well, but who do not care if we are angry with them or not.

2. Journal, and re-read. Keeping a journal is a vital aspect of personal growth and self-understanding. The greatest benefit comes from writing, then seeing what we have written, and then reading it again months or years later so that we can see patterns and repetitions.

3. Meditate. How can you get to know anyone if you do not listen to them? Yet we rarely listen to our own inner selves. There is usually too much going on in the day-to-day rush of thoughts, plans, anxieties, and general inner conversation that, even though it is within us, is still superficial. Before we can listen to the inner core of our authentic selves we need to learn how to quiet down the hustle and bustle of daily surface thoughts by meditating regularly.

4. Allow yourself to be vulnerable, drop the defenses. When we believe we need to defend ourselves, the walls of the fortress go up. There are few things more liberating than learning that we can say, “I made a mistake, I’m sorry,” and that the world does not fall around our ears. If we live so that we can be honest about our lives, we do not need to hide behind a wall of pretense that we often end up believing ourselves. When we bring down that wall, we get to see the world outside, and to better understand our place in it.

5. Get out of the rut. *That’s just the way I am* is a cop-out. Be willing to do something different, try a different way of dealing with things. Expose yourself to different ways of thinking, mingle with people who have different opinions and ideas from you, LISTEN to them, and think about what they say.

6. Listen to yourself. How often as adults have we realized that we sound just like one or other of our parents. It is sometimes an unwelcome shock. Now consider how many other characters speak through your mouth. Have you given permission? Do they truly speak for you? Or are you parroting someone else’s thoughts without benefit of your own? How would you feel if someone spoke to you as you speak to them?

7. Write your story subjectively, then read it objectively. What would you think if you were about to meet this person? They say that each of us has at least one book in us. One book is the story of our own life. How would yours read? Would you consider yourself a hero or a villain, a do-er or a passive pawn?

8. Observe yourself. Now pretend that you are a newscaster giving a running commentary on your behavior. Or that you are an author writing a book about you. Step back and notice what is going on. What do you look like from the outside? (This differs from the previous point because of the viewpoint. Then you wrote subjectively, from your own point of view. Now your viewpoint is as an observer.)

9. Stop justifying what you do. You do not need to explain every action. The goal is to know yourself well enough that you know your actions are justified. If someone wants to know why you did something, they can ask. And even then, if it is none of their business, you do not have to answer.

10. Do something that will push you to your limits, safely. Think of something that you always wanted to do, but did not dare. Find a way to do it now (assuming that it is legal, will not hurt anyone, and is not truly dangerous). If sky-diving was something that always made your heart leap, then find a way to learn to sky-dive. Walk in the wilderness, in silence. Listen to your heart.

Character Builders

By Diana Gardner Robinson Leave a Comment

It is less common to speak of someone having character than it used to be. It’s still something special to be around someone who has it. People with character

 1.   Do it even if it’s difficult.

2.   Take responsibility for their choices, their actions, and their consequences.

 3.   Know why they do what they do, and usually have good reasons.

 4.   Are honest, and be true to their word, both with themselves and with others.

 5.  Know their strengths, and work from them. Know their weaknesses even better and avoid feeding into them.

 6.   Recognize the choices open to them, and use them wisely.

 7.  Develop self-discipline and know how not to overdo it.

 8.  Develop the ability to luxuriate, know when it’s time to stop, and are able to stop.

 9.  Know the difference between what they want and what they need.

 10.  Recognize and respect boundaries. They are clear about their own, and they give equal value and weight to those of others.

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