Tag Archives: other

What’s Your Problem?

A mouse looked through a crack in the wall to see the farmer and his wife opening a package; what food might it contain?

He was aghast to discover that it was a mouse trap!

Retreating to the farmyard, the mouse proclaimed the warning, “There is a mouse trap in the house, there is a mouse trap in the house.”

The chicken clucked and scratched, raised her head and said, “Mr. Mouse, I can tell you this is a grave concern to you, but it is of no consequence to me; I cannot be bothered by it.”

The mouse turned to the pig and told him, “There is a mouse trap in the house.”

“I am so very sorry Mr. Mouse,” sympathized the pig, “but there is nothing I can do about it but pray; be assured that you are in my prayers.”

The mouse turned to the cow, who replied, “Like wow, Mr. Mouse, a mouse trap; am I in grave danger, Duh?”

So the mouse returned to the house, head down and dejected to face the farmer’s mouse trap alone.

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Free Advice

Below is an excerpt from a letter submitted to Carolyn Hax, advice columnist.

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Dear Carolyn:

How should I handle my new boyfriend’s ANGRY ex? She is using their children to try to control him and break us up.

Anonymous

Dear Anonymous: The way not to handle this angry ex is by casting the ex as the villain, your boyfriend as victim and yourself as superhero. That common trap yields nothing but victims — the kids, of course, along with every adult who’s involved.

Very few people, when you see them up close, fall neatly into categories. The selfish can show compassion, poets can be heartless, warriors can be gentle, the wise can make stupid mistakes, charmers can be sincere, heroes can save the world only to succumb to emotional stage fright at home — or vice versa, and so on.

When you see people only through the eyes of others, your impressions get flattened into caricatures. Understandably, since flat people are easier to file away, dismiss, blame for everything.

But even if this “ANGRY ex” is throwing an extended tantrum, she’s no caricature. She’s the woman your boyfriend once loved, the mother of his kids.

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What Carolyn has to say about the reasons we tend to ‘flatten people into caricatures’ is right on the money…it helps us efficiently dismiss and blame others…so much easier and faster than every other option.

Carolyn also reminds us here of our tendencies to select the perspective that best justifies our own emotions, rather than the perspective that will deliver the best results to the most people.  Think about what you’re thinking about (or not) people.

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I’m A Stripper Too

Enjoy this post from my favorite advice columnist, Cary Tennis over at Salon.com.  By the time you finish reading, you’ll be laughing and reflecting at the same time…a winning combination if there ever was one!

Dear Cary,

I am not an angry person, but lately I feel infuriated when people are referred to as “illegals,” or “strippers,” as if that were their whole identity, or what they are, above being just human. Granted, most of these references are made by Web site commenters or the interesting mix of people that local news stations always seem to find willing to give a sound bite on the street. (Although the other day on my local NPR affiliate the host referred to a woman involved in a crime as a “stripper.”)

If a real live person in my life does this, I point it out, and it usually ends in an argument, and sometimes I even win and succeed in educating the objectifier. But I wonder how to spread the word that this is cruel — in a productive way.

Thanks for your column.

Melissa

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A Bit of My Story

I have always been a change agent, at least in this lifetime.  From a fairly early age, I began rebelling against the life philosophy I was to be conditioned into within my early family:  get them before they get you; there’s a sucker born every minute; if someone is stupid enough to be duped, then they deserve what they get; life is a bowl of shit at its very best; education is for people who have no snap, and are too stupid to figure it out on their own, etc etc.  At first, my rebellion against this way of seeing was silent, internal, and produced only high levels of shame and anger.  Eventually, I faced the fact that I would have to teach myself a better set of values than what I had been offered if I wanted to thrive, rather than just survive.  Talk about feeling overwhelmed!  It took a long time and the help of some loving mentors in my life, but I finally began to model many of the values I had long aspired to.

After reaching this goal, I began teaching myself how to take a stand for these values out in the world.   This was much harder, and I kept running into an invisible roadblock that I couldn’t define clearly.  Great inner frustration ensued once again (and where there’s frustration, there’s anger) but my intent to discover the nature of this inner roadblock never wavered, even though it took years to get to the source.

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Smart is in the Heart

By Melissa Shawn

This perspective will be very useful to you if you can suspend your thoughts about what I am going to say, and instead just experience the truth of it in your heart.  As you read, you may get a sense that you already understand the ideas being presented intellectually, but perhaps you are still missing a living, breathing, heart-based knowing.  The truth presented here is so simple–but when our brains take charge of processing it, we end up making a complicated mess of it.

Whenever we “fall in love with someone else” — whether this is platonic love for a friend, romantic love, or just love of a certain quality in another — we are really falling in love with ourselves.  Whatever it is you find to love in the other is actually portraying an image of that which you deeply love in yourself.  It is never (yes, never) THEM you love; you are loving an image of YOUR OWN SOUL — reflected by the other so that you can see it and love yourself more.  This is no different than seeing your physical self reflected back in a mirror so that you can see it, except it is your soul being reflected rather than your body.  It is YOU that you are loving any time you love another.   In loving an other, you are seeing that which you deeply love about yourself—but aren’t consciously connected to.  And so the “other” comes along and hands you the gift of conscious connection to your own self love.
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