Everything in life is relative.
Even our painful relationship experiences
can provide the opportunity to know ourselves better.
Reflection |
There are
many things in life that challenge and frustrate us. Weeding the garden may not
be especially irritating or painful, but relationships with colleagues, family
and friends, now these do have a habit of taxing our patience and kindness. Could these become opportunities for learning
about ourselves?
To know
ourselves better, we first need to become aware of what we do. For example, in order to judge others, we
must be operating under the assumption that we are able to see them and their
habits clearly. Otherwise we’d just be
arrogant fools thinking we are better than everyone else. And most of us don’t always operate from this
space of arrogance. It is very much a
part of our human nature to judge, criticize, assess, discern, deconstruct
something we are trying to understand. Can
we use this to our advantage?
Often our tendencies aren’t universally wrong or bad.
That is: some things are perfectly okay in specific settings and spaces.
A shoe is in its rightful place on a
shoe rack, but could be problematic on an altar. A weed is ‘bad’ only because it’s stifling
the growth of a plant that you choose to have live instead of the weed. Likewise, the ability to criticize and
critique when used against a person is less appreciated, but when used to analyze the
pros and cons of a situation is extremely valuable. Essentially then everything in life is
relative. So then, can we exploit our human tendency for judging to give us a
glimpse into our own nature, character and attitudes?
In
psychology, there’s something called projection. Whenever we criticize or find fault with
others, we are projecting our own faults outward onto other people. This is how and where we are able to see them
clearly. Our failings and weaknesses are
hard for us to see because they are so intimately known to us, and very much
part of our unconscious habits and reactivity. Much like the person we are criticizing is unable to see their own faults, we are our own blind spot.
A Mirror |
Our unconscious habits, attitudes, beliefs,
attachments, desires, and expectations become the hobbling blocks that put us out
of step in our relationships. If having
wonderfully fulfilling relationships are important to you, then it’s a
worthwhile investment of your time and energy to discover who you are, and how
you operate in stressful and challenging situations.
Of
course, this doesn’t mean others don’t have faults, and you and I are the only
ones who do. It simply means instead of
becoming embroiled in feeling bad about judging, we can use it as a chance to
begin some interior work of our own. We
can use the feeling of shame, frustration, and despair we feel at being unhappy
with someone else and our reaction to them, to examine what in us is causing
such a reaction. We can take a breath
and turn the lens inward to see if that exact same fault exists in us. In this way, we train in becoming smart about
ourselves.
We begin paying attention to what irritates us
about our spouse, sibling, friend, and boss and then look for that same
irritant in ourselves. Who knows? We may discover that sharing similar
irritating or worrying traits is sufficient impetus to stall, if not
completely eliminate, future tirades against others.
Awareness
is a powerful tool for change. Its mere
presence is enough to help us work towards fruitful relationships where each
person is allowed to be who they are, pursue what is important to
them, and grow to know themselves better.
May we
learn to see ourselves clearly.