Category Archives: Feeling

Selling One’s Self Short

It comes up in conversation.  Recently, a friend and I were having lunch and the topic of young girl’s clothing choices came up.  It is something that bothers me a lot.  Young girls think that the way to get the attention of boys is to dress provocatively and parade around showing themselves off.  Of course, this is true.  It most certainly does that!

This isn’t new.  In fact it has been happening for eons.  But the thing that disturbs me, is that we haven’t successfully communicated the message to girls that they are objectifying themselves and making it hard for boys to see who they really are. Their worth as a human being is attached to their appearance.  We are all to blame for this.  We need to retrain girls and boys.  

The thing is, if we don’t do something to change this, girls will forever continue to value themselves in terms that depend mainly on their physical looks.  This is tragic.  If that is the criteria that is the focus of one’s value, what if the current trend of attraction does not include you?  And this so-called beauty can diminish one’s self-worth, even when one feels attractive. This is true with boys as well as girls, but not to the same degree because they are not objectified to the extent that girls are.

With boys, the focus is often on conquests.  Conquests that are of physical strength  (in sports and such) and conquests of girls consume a lot of their time.  Setting aside the issue of misogyny, (which is something else entirely) this makes it difficult, at best, to even think of seeking out meaningful relationships that can nurture and sustain us when times get tough. And it is a focus that exacerbates feelings of  low self- worth when one is no longer capable of doing things.

Unfortunately, in my jobs with teens, I have found that the gospel of lack has a booming following.  What I mean is that the ubiquitous advertising of self-worth through ownership of things also contributes to a lack of money being the source of selling one’s self short.

We all come into this world with inherent value.  We matter.  All of us matter.  We matter from the moment we are born.  We are all here for a reason, and that reason is not looks, physical strength, or monetary means.

Meaningful relationships, love for one’s fellow human beings, the important, far-reaching measures of self-fulfillment are the things that make our time here satisfying and life-giving. We need not sell ourselves short.  We should not do so.  Life is precious and so are we.  Enough said.

 

Do Unto Others (The Golden Rule)

Anyone who has ever had any religious training or even had a lesson on how one should deal with others, surely has heard, “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.”  Maybe the message was, “Treat other people the way you want to be treated.”   Whatever the actual words, the meaning was clear.  Be nice.  Be fair.  Be decent.

It seems to me that with the current political climate, the animosity toward people not like ourselves, the inability of people to put themselves in other people’s shoes, the denial of people to take responsibility for their actions and other problems we face in today’s world, we are forgetting this simple, basic precept.  Why is it so difficult do unto others reciprocally?

One person never has all the answers.  Cooperation requires us to see things through another person’s lens.  Indeed, this is the truest path toward a lasting peace.  So why don’t we do this out of self-interest?  Isn’t it better to live in harmony than to be at odds with others?

Some of the best moments in life are when people are bound together for a common goal that benefits everyone.  How can any person have faith in mankind if others have not considered them as important as anyone else?  Every person has value and deserves to be considered.  If one grows up without being valued, that person cannot be a part of the conversation.  When this happens, there is a break in trust that can foster deep unrest.  We unwittingly create bullies by doing this.  This affects everyone negatively.  It is in everyone’s interest to care about each other.  Do unto others.  

When I ignore the plight of other people’s tragedies, I become part of the problem that plagues our world.  The humane reaction to disaster or catastrophe is not to say, “It’s not my problem.” The answer that brings peace is, “What can I do to help?”  As simplistic as it may sound, just looking at things through a lens of love and understanding toward humanity could shift our collective minds to a compassionate mode of thinking.  The world can change when we change our minds.  Do unto others.