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No two people are alike. We do not think alike, act or react alike,
like alike. Each of us is unique, one of a kind. There was no one like us
before nor will there ever be one just like us again. Never. While we may
have very, very much in common, even sharing many of the same genes, no
one of us is exactly alike.
Sometimes
we forget that. And even when we remember how different we really are one
from another, we usually do not give that fact much thought, especially in
those moments when we most should. When we find ourselves disagreeing with
another over a matter, be that matter large or small, theological,
logical, or simply a matter of taste, the main reason we do not see eye to
eye is that our backgrounds are different. Those backgrounds color what we
see in the foreground. And it can be no other way. We may overcome some of
what happened to us as we grew up, but we cannot act as it was never
there. It is still very much a part of us, and always will be.
Our
background is made up of many different and varying components. Where we
were raised: country, city, small town, metropolis; how much money our
family had: ranging from the hovels of poverty to the mansions of wealth
or somewhere in between; the amount of formal education we had or did not
have; whether we were an only child or had many siblings – all these
color our foreground.
Even
more: health issues, past or present, bear upon how we act or react, on
how we think or what we think. So does our personal experience with other
people and other cultures. If we have never left home, we will see reality
differently than one who has “seen the world.” Our diet, our physical
condition, our sense of humor, the climate in which we live all have an
effect on our response to any given situation.
For
the most part we are never all that conscious of our background. We know
who we are and where we come from and all the rest. But it is back there
in our unconsciousness somewhere and not up close and personal whenever we
interact with someone else. The same is true for the other. And so when we
argue about some point of personal importance, it is important that we
understand not only our background but where the other comes from as well.
Until we do, we will never understand the other, nor will the other
understand us.
What
is more important than understanding the other, why the other thinks the
way he does, we need to understand why we think and act the way we do.
What we will discover is that as unique as we are, we are just as
complicated. So much has gone into making us who we are that it is no
wonder we often wonder why we do what we do, why we think the way we
think, why we react the way we do. If we cannot understand ourselves, why
we are the way we are, is it any wonder we cannot understand someone else?
The
point is not that we are doomed to disagree or that we will never
understand others. It is simply to say that we need to be less judgmental
about why another is the way s/he is and ask the other to be the same for
us. It will make life so much easier.
WJP
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