Most people see things as either/or. Things or people are seen as good or bad, right or wrong, black or white, liberal or conservative, successful or unsuccessful, attractive or unattractive, and on and on. People tend to walk around and consciously or unconsciously make judgments. We all do this. This type of thinking is called dualistic thinking. Imagine a day where you don’t do this. Imagine a day where you don’t see life as either/or but rather both/and. This type of thinking is called non-dualistic thinking. It is non-judgmental. I also like to think of it as walking the middle path. When one walks the middle path, and ceases to judge everything as good or bad, you experience a oneness with life rather than a separation from parts of it. There’s a common phrase that simplifies this. I’m sure you’ve heard people say “It is what it is”. It’s a phrase I tend to overuse but I like it. I admit that it is sometimes challenging for me to make a decision because I can usually see both sides of an issue. Because of my desire to walk the middle path and to be a non-dualistic thinker, I try to find an answer in the middle of conflicting opinions. This seems to be a lost art in modern day politics. No one seems willing to compromise and meet in the middle. Always seeing everything as either/or, and never being willing to compromise and meet in the middle, gets us nothing but gridlock and standoffs. When everyone is holding their ground you can never move ahead.
No comments:
Post a Comment