Wednesday, April 11, 2012

To Know Someone




I have been thinking lately about how well we might know others, and also let others know us.  Just as a disclaimer, I want to make clear that I am not a psychologist, I didn’t go to college or grad school, and there are no letters at all behind my name.  But I read a lot about this kind of thing because it interests me deeply, and I believe I have learned a lot about it.

A guy I used to work with once said that everyone has 3 faces – the one they show to acquaintances and the bigger world, the second they show only to their closest loved ones, and the third (real one) known only to themselves.  Al-Anon lore says we should avoid comparing our “insides” to other peoples “outsides”.  And we do that, don’t we…compare our unseen innards to the visible, outer shells of those around us?  Does it make any sense? 

No one can really know another person completely, because all of us live inside our own heads to a large extent.  I’ve thought a lot about this and I believe it may be pretty close to the truth. We can really only guess at what someone else’s motivations might be and many times, I suspect that what we guess at and think we are responding to is not at all accurate.  Part of this is because everyone operates from behind (the shield/mask of) their own ego, which listens to what is said and then (mis)interprets it (I have found the writings of author Eckhart Tolle on the ego to be spot-on and literally life changing).  

Part of it comes down to semantics; certain words have different emotional overtones that define their meaning to an individual.  Part of it, I’m sure at least for me, is sloppy word choice.  My thoughts race (especially at certain times) and I quickly go to my brain when I am speaking to find the right words, sometimes grabbing a word that is not even close to the best one to express what my actual thought is at the moment.  To further complicate things, we take what others give us in the form of words and actions and fill in the abundant blanks with the byproducts of our egos… fear and self doubt, thereby producing a fundamentally flawed perception of our world.

Many times I find that others misunderstand me.  I say something that I intend to communicate a certain idea to someone, and from their response, I can tell that they think I was saying something else entirely.  Yet, it would be exhausting if I tried to correct every such exchange, plus I’d be talking way too much and I guess that others would think I was a huge boor and start avoiding me.

So how then can we ever hope to know each other as we really are, to any degree at all?  I think the only way is to try to listen to others not so much with our brains, but more so with our hearts.  If we can observe how someone lives and attend to the things they do, rather than just to that face they show us and also try to slow down and choose our own words more carefully, we might get closer to real communication.  I’ve been trying to do that.  It helps, but even so, my perception is not always going to be correct.  Still, it may be the best we can do with our human limitations.


6 comments:

  1. "So how then can we ever hope to know each other as we really are, to any degree at all? I think the only way is to try to listen to others not so much with our brains, but more so with our hearts."

    I think it's by open honest communication, over time. It also takes involvement face to face, and shoulder to shoulder. (Sports/games help.) As does tragedy. Also, it takes mutual permission.

    Enjoyed your post.

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  2. That is a truly thought-provoking post, Deedee. It is so true and the understanding of the heart and the head can be quite at odds with one another in relation to the same person.

    By the way I have a theory that college and grad school and university tell us that we have learned 'stuff' and probably have an ability to pass exams. It does not tell us that a person has intelligence and common sense or inter-personal skills or whether they are a good human being. Give me the latter every time.

    I shall come back to this but I wanted you to know that I'd read it.

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  3. Thanks Don. I think you are right, going through life events, or participating as part of a team definitely helps us get to know each other better than just exchanging words. I enjoy having those opportunities when they come around.

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  4. Thanks, GB. I agree with your statement about formal education. I too prefer the non-formal type! I look forward to reading mor of your thoughts on this subject!

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  5. Hi Deedee,
    However did we lose touch? Thanks sooo much for the comment on my blog. It was great to "see" you again!

    As for THIS marvelous post, I agree with GB. I have worked with and known so many highly educated people in my life who seriously didn't know squat about life. It was a real challenge to give them the respect that their "credentials" suggested they were due! I think it bred in me, quite early on, a bit of rebellion (Ha!) and also a desire to research my butt off to prove them wrong. Not surprising, I suppose, that I am passionate beyond belief about advocating for health freedom, natural alternatives and waking people up to see the horrendous connections (money of course) between the fake phude industries, Big Pharma, government, the AMA, FDA, etc. ad nauseum.

    I promise to stay in touch better!
    Hugs
    SuZen

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  6. Suzen - I'm so glad you're writing about that stuff - we need you and other rebels to keep fighting that good fight. I am definitely with you!

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