To Judge, Or Be Judged, That Is The Question.

We have all been stung by the venom of judgment. That name calling, labeling, finger pointing, rage inducing, crucifying and all that dramatic stuff kind of word. It’s that thing people do when they believe form objective opinions and come to their own conclusions based on circumstantial evidence, stereotypes, an isolated incident or simply because something is not the way they perceive it to be or want it to be.

We could not walk through a room full of people without being plucked apart in silent judgement like seagulls to a fry. We know it. We feel it. And we’ll do our best to maintain our composure or be as invisible as possible.

Regrettably, we cannot escape judgement any more than we can escape our parents, pets, children or partners for a silent moment. It’s there, lurking behind new unfamiliar eyes or waiting to pounce with objections and criticisms from just about everyone else. Don’t be fooled, even those who love us will not shy away from sharing their opinions or judgments. It’s part of love. It’s part of hate. It’s part of fear and insecurity.

It’s part of life.

We will encounter judgment every time we walk out the door and sometimes even before we make it there. Majority of the time we would not know it but when we do, it will sting. Yet, let’s not be so quick to throw any pity parties. We too have judged and will continue to sentence others to life-long labels and unfortunately, we would also be the first to throw a jab at ourselves before we have even brushed our teeth.

We are mere spectators exposed to many facets and varying stories of another’s being, Along with external influences, our perspectives, beliefs and how we choose to live our lives will sway from making us an easy target to becoming a hefty dart thrower ourselves. This is inevitable.

But does this make it right?

Well, there is more to judgement than simply assigning someone with a hasty tag.

Stories, lifestyles and everything we observe trigger things in us. Watch the news for an hour and witness that pleasant and kind self transform into an offensive, vulgar, cussing and cursing beast. Media has tendency to intentionally initiate and perpetuate stories to induce judgmental thoughts, emotions and behaviors we often easily become a casualty of.

With all the gossip, shame, scandals, protests, rumors and humiliation, the world has gone mad! And as long as the spotlight is not on us, we love to feast on this garbage.

There are no rules and there is no perfect, safe image to hide behind. It doesn’t exist because if you haven’t noticed, we are all different; in every way an individual can be different.

Therefore, sometimes the appearance of someone may be enough to irritate us when that which we view as trashy, slutty, thuggish, plastic, sloppy or ugly is simply inappropriate and unpleasant.

Or maybe the way someone behaves is provoking because their loud, obtrusive, mute, stuck up, flamboyant ways are not our kind of flavor.

Or maybe other people’s opinions just seem painfully annoying because anyone thinking or believing outside of our opinions and perspectives are absolutely and unequivocally wrong. And it can be tremendously frustrating trying to open people’s eyes to how wrong they are and how right we are. The tug-o-war between two opposing ‘truths’ can be quite comical.

We could be as petty with our judgments such as labeling someone as uneducated or stupid simply because of incorrect grammar or pronunciation; or as dramatic as politicians by bullying and trashing each other’s weaknesses and past experiences for personal interest and gain.

However, the true theatrics rests in our actions. How we deliver our opinions and how we manage criticism is essential. Because if we do not handle either well, they could unnecessarily lead to retaliation, depression, aggression, suicide and even war.  

Comprehending what activates our damnatory, moralist attitude may assist us to move from judgement to understanding. Understanding helps us step away from our clouded egotistical views. When we dig deeper, we find the authenticity behind people’s words, actions, fears and insecurities. We find truth and vulnerability. We find commonality.

So, what makes us so inclined to judge?

Judgment is part of this evaluation and preference process. We are constantly forming opinions about everything we see, hear, taste, touch, smell and experience. It is part of analyzing what we want and do not want. And it is only through the opportunities of contrast and variety that we are capable of being selective. Like picking our favorite flowers from a meadow, deciding on our preferred food from a buffet or choosing the people we hang out with.

Contrasts allow us to become more specific about what we want. With an abundance of diverse options, there is a continued assembling of new ideas, views, concepts, perspectives, opinions and desires. Like adding our own ingredients to our masterpiece.

Of course, there is a difference between judgement and opinion. Whilst judgements are largely due to a distorted lens composed of one’s prejudices and limitations, many of our opinions can be favorable. We can find people attractive or their confidence appealing and their lifestyles desirable. It isn’t a sword fight every time. But when our artillery comes out, there is something deeper going on internally we feel obligated to protect and defend or have an urgency to destroy presumed threats.

We form opinions because that is our way of creating. It is reinventing, modifying and molding to suit our perspective. Of course, this perspective is ever changing so our opinions will also shift to coincide with this evolvement.

Sometimes these perspectives can change rather quickly depending on our mood or insecurities.

A successful businessman/woman may have been someone we admired until we received another bill in the mail to remind us of our financial insecurity changing our view of them from fortunate, to entitled snobs. Or a very attractive man/woman may have been someone we appreciated until he/she caught the eye of our partner which influenced our opinion of them from beautiful to stuck-up. Or a person who has done a good deed in the community may have been someone we admired until our mother reminded us that we are nothing like them which warped our perspective of them from good-hearted to a pompous fake.

Though our opinions and perspectives flow in harmony with the stream of our imagination, thoughts and emotions; without opinions, we are merely observers. Except, we do not have the capacity to be strictly observers, nor would we want to. It is virtually impossible for us to go five minutes without having an opinion or judgment about something.

While observation alone may make a great sociologist, it is not the best paradigm for our physical existence. Without judgment or opinion, we would not be stirring up any contrast. Contrast is the fundamental ingredient to expansion. Without something to compare to, without diversity; growth is not possible. The greater the contrast, the stronger the desire. The stronger the desire, the more intense the emotion. The more intense the emotion, the more powerful the momentum. The more powerful the momentum, the faster the expansion.

Frankly, it is due to this stupendous speed that physical life exists. But we’ll leave that to the scientists and stick to ruffling each other’s feathers.

We live in an abundantly diverse world. It is this diversity which makes us eternal beings. The smorgasbord of people, thoughts and stories combined is enough to satisfy our creative gluttonous appetites for eons of lifetimes.

Diversity is expansion! With every interaction, we exchange variation – sparking or giving birth to something new all day long. A new desire, idea or thought. A more intense craving for something greater. A more powerful yearning for change. It is the very reason for infiniteness.

All of who we are includes a myriad of thoughts, beliefs and stories we have gathered along the way. Every miniscule experience, every emotion, reaction, belief, idea, opinion, every creature we have encountered, every sensory experience, every person we have ever come into contact with along with their own personal entourage of stuff and every single heartbeat is the make-up of all we are in this very moment…until the next moment.

So, where does the motivation for judgement come from? There are many. Though ultimately, they all lead back to the same source – how we perceive self.

We are constantly evaluating and interpreting everything we hear, see, taste, touch, smell and experience. How we interpret something is the distance between who we are and who we perceive ourselves to be. What we see when we observe someone is either extending from love or not and when it is not, it is coming from a place of fear and insecurity. What we perceive when we observe ourselves is either extending from love or not and when it is not, it is coming from a place detachment and separation.

Except fear and insecurity have their own ways of construing stories. And disconnection from self has a way of blaming and shaming others. They must, in order to coincide with our emotions and make sense of them.

When we feel good about who we are and where we are in our lives, we generally have a happy demeanor and an overall lightness about us. We are genuinely happy for our friend’s success. We recognize our neighbor may be having a hard day when he/she does not wave back or say hello. We avoid negative nonsense and conversations that may affect our good mood. We have a lust for life and enjoy interactions with people.

But when we are not feeling so good about who we are or where we are in our life, everything becomes increasingly annoying. Especially that successful friend who we resent for being so successful. In fact, we resent happy people in general. We make everyone’s reaction a personal issue. Therefore, our neighbor becomes an arrogant jerk for not saying hello and the world overall is responsible for our negative experiences.

We indulge in negative, hypocritical conversations filled with gossip and slander. We prefer to bond with other judgers and smear judgment all over the place so that we are not alone in our dark judgment-filled space. Mostly, we want people to pay for our ‘victimhood’.

 ‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you’ is a phrase some of us try to live by. However, what we instead are doing to others is what we have already done to ourselves. When we treat ourselves with love, kindness, appreciation and respect, so too would we treat others in the same manner. On the other hand, when we are often criticizing, judging and labeling ourselves, then so too would we approach others with the same attitude.

When you judge another, you do not define them, you define yourself”. Wayne Dyer

Judgement always reveals something about us. Behind every label and criticism, there is a hidden fear, insecurity and detachment. Typically, the way we see or measure ourselves is the same manner which we view and measure others. Mostly, depending on how we assess our own lives will determine how we judge others. Whether we measure it by success, relationships, intellect or appearance; our judgements will be generated by that which drives us and is led by our beliefs.

If we are perfectionists, we expect perfection from others and when they fail, we judge harshly as we would ourselves.

If we are people pleasers, we expect to be pleased by others and when they fail, we judge bitterly as we would ourselves.

If we are hard-working, we expect others to be equally as hard working and when they fail, we judge firmly as we would ourselves.

We also judge others for the negative qualities we dislike in ourselves. Therefore, if we perceive ourselves as lazy, ugly, aggressive, deceitful or unfaithful, then so too would we be inclined to judge people for these qualities.

Sometimes we would much rather be right than harmonious. We view sympathy as an undeserving free pass to unwanted behavior which ultimately makes us unwilling to understand anything outside our standards.

This type of attitude can become condemning. Condemning those who do not share the same values or beliefs. Condemning those who do not change their conditions, behaviors or beliefs so that we can feel better and safer in ours. Condemning those feeling, thinking, acting outside our comfort zones.

Condemnation is deeply disserving because we maintain a strong focus on misery and adversity. It would be like condemning certain flowers in the meadow simply because they were not to our liking or condemning particular food from a buffet because they were not to our taste.

Judgment closes our eyes to the beauty, abundance and clarity of life. It closes our minds from variation, inspiration, insight and knowledge. And it closes our hearts from acceptance, love and unity.

Most times, it is easier to judge because we do not have to evaluate ourselves. We do not have to face our fears and insecurities. We do not have to be understanding, accepting or kind. It is easier to point blame or be the victim and demand others to change than to dare adjust our attitude.

But there are simple ways to bridge the gap.

One of the simplest is finding commonality. Regardless of how ‘different’ we believe we are, the similarities that exist even among those we find most peculiar or we are most opposing of, will surprise us. However, if we struggle to find one, there are a few we can implicitly rely on.

We are all physical beings who come into this world for the purpose of expansion. We are all pure, positive energy coupled with a broad, complex mind and emotional instability. We are equally pliable, adaptable and susceptible to external influences, beliefs, perceptions and prejudices. More importantly, we all want to be accepted, appreciated and loved.

Judgment is merely a habit heavily influenced by comparison. Stepping away from judgment would be to step away from comparison and the need to group everything as ‘good’ or ‘bad’. It would also mean refraining from placing our self into ‘better’ or ‘worse’ categories and simply be an observer.

Avoiding coming to warped negative conclusions about others based on our own insecurities or superiorities can be challenging. However, it is also hindering our appreciation of them and misleading of their authenticity.   

In the words of Albert Einstein, ‘Everybody is a genius, but if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing it is stupid’.

When we value and love who we are, we are not concerned with who ‘they’ are. In fact, it is none of our business and we no longer care to invest time evaluating, envying or devaluing others in order to know our own worth. Only when we understand our own worth, are we capable of seeing the value of others…without judgment.

Everybody is perfect, but if you judge an elephant by its ability to behave like a mouse, it will live its whole life believing it is flawed.

Seeing the best in people beyond their physical appearance, successes and failures and even their actions is powerful. When we do not require a criterion checklist to decide which labels best fit our perception of them and where they stand in relationship to our perception of self, we practice appreciation.

Furthermore, how we feel about ourselves is not governed by our impression of others nor is it guided by others’ opinion of us.

Appreciating someone extends from our higher, broader self. Appreciation is enough to help others rise above their own self-criticisms and if even for a moment, be the better version of themselves.

Kindness is easy when people are being kind. Generosity is easy when people are being generous. And judgment is easy when others are also being judgmental. But it takes a wise man to understand that kindness is most impactful where it is absent. And he is not only able to recognize this but knows his own power to masterfully execute it.

The ‘What If’ Epidemic!

If there was a name for a virus that affected the livelihood of our physical existence, it would be ‘what if’! Mental, physical, emotional and spiritual health are necessities to a joyful, fulfilling life. However, the growing volume, strength and influence of ‘what ifs’ are gradually becoming an epidemic!

These two little words, that do not hold more than one syllable each can affect, influence and change the course of one’s entire life experience. These two words can haunt you in your sleep, be the reason for elevated anxiety, throbbing headaches, tight chest, endless tears and even the reason why you just want to ‘check out’.

They can stunt or break a dream and smear toxic poisons all over what used to be a purely inspired passion. They can ruin relationships, damage friendships and crumble careers; all from a single bogus ‘what if?’

If you ever wondered who is responsible for your disappointments…. it is ‘what if’!

If you were ever curious how clarity and certainty could turn into confusion and doubt…it is ‘what if’!

If you ever pondered how something that felt so right could suddenly feel so wrong…..it is ‘what if’!

They’re like that one colleague with a bad attitude that somehow always shows up and can ruin a perfectly good day with a simple comment. The one that is always complaining, demands answers and likes to put a damper on everything.

We are all well acquainted with these two incredibly influential words. We can say we have spoken and heard them equally. They’re part of our daily worrisome dialogue. When we are not throwing ‘what ifs’ at ourselves, we are generously bestowing others with them.

Sometimes, we don’t even feel we need to point out the ‘what if’ factor. When we really want to make a point, we’ll leave them out simply so that what follows is emphasized with greater intensity, purpose and sense of urgency. For example, ‘What if I end up alone for the rest of my life?’ could easily turn into the matter-of -fact: ‘I will end up alone for the rest of my life!’

If there were ever two joint words more exploited and disfavored, it would be these two. Never have two words been more powerful and concurrently debilitating than what follows them.

We are consumed with infinite possibilities of doom that we become imprisoned by our minds!

When it comes to fear-driven thoughts, images and beliefs, we are never more creative than what ensues a ‘what if?’ In fact, we could give a list of what if scenarios on any given topic in one sitting. There are more fear-driven projections collectively than there are leaves of every tree on the planet!

They range from personal what ifs that jeopardize our dreams, goals and joy to universal what ifs that threaten the extinction of all of life on Earth.

There is no shortage of potential apocalypses: super volcanoes, radiation, ice-age, absorption of the sun, asteroid threat – to name a few.

There is no shortage of potential termination to personal goals, dreams and desires. If we can imagine it, ANYTHING could threaten the full fruition of these.

We are consumed with infinite possibilities of doom that we become imprisoned by our minds!

Sometimes, by the time we are done dreaming our dream, it has lost its strength and significance. When a dream becomes contaminated beyond repair, it can completely alter our experience of it.

So why do we participate and dwell on fear-driven thoughts, and beliefs that are hindering?

Well, the sole reason is due to our belief that something outside of us has control and that we are merely the reactors to life rather than the creators of it.

Based on this rationale, we attempt to overcome them in two ways: prevention and preparedness.

“Good things will come but one must maintain awareness of the negatives at all times” was frequently expressed by my wonderful mother as if annoyed by my frivolous ways with life. She saw perpetual fun as lack of maturity which translated into not taking life seriously. It wasn’t that she was against my playful nature; her concern came from the belief that to deny potential risks, dangers, misfortunes or threats would be to walk through life without a survival kit.

Like many, she has always felt that the most effective way to avoid negative situations is through acknowledgement, awareness and preparedness of them. Anyone who floats through life with joy and optimism is foolish and naïve.

A wise person is someone who makes smart decisions and smart decision makers are not risk takers. They certainly do not rely on optimism. They are not flighty or fickle. They are not spontaneous or impulsive. They are planners and problem solvers.

The irony is, once these fear-driven thoughts have been acknowledged and invited into our mind and our emotions; they comfortably take front seat of our desires causing mayhem. Preparedness is practicing it, expecting it, planning for it and organizing our life around that which we believe is on its way to us.

Though we can appreciate being precautionary, it also sucks the fun out of life. It no longer is about enjoying it, rather, surviving it and merely getting through the day.

When we feel most alive and inspired to be, do, have something of importance, all those ‘what ifs’ start to come out of the woodwork. Maybe not so loud at first. Generally, the excitement far outweighs the negative, curve-throwing, nuisance thoughts. We know they are there, we can at times feel them but the eagerness and intensity of this high supersedes any vexatious imposters.

That is, until someone else has something to say about it!

And we all have something to say about someone else’s decisions, choices, actions, dreams and desires.

Like the time my little family and I announced we were packing up and moving closer to the mountains. We heard the mountains calling for quite some time. Our conversations were filled with details of every way our senses would be aroused and pleased by the beauty. We shared stories and visions and we would often squint our eyes and pretend distant clouds or buildings were mountain peaks. We submerged ourselves in youtube videos, maps, images, stories and anything we could find that stimulated this desire. Until one day, our stars aligned and we knew that day, that time had arrived.

There were a mix of emotions from our family and friends. Our friends were mostly excited for our new adventure. Our families? Well, not so much. Mostly because it opened doors to all the what ifs.

‘What if you don’t end up liking it and you gave up your beautiful home?’, ‘What if you can’t sustain your business there?’, ‘What if you can’t generate jobs and income?’, ‘What if something happens and WE are not close enough to help?’, ‘What if something happens and YOU are not close enough to help?’, ‘What if you get attacked by a bear, wolf, mountain lion?’, ‘What if you injure yourselves on one of your hikes or fall off a cliff?’

Then there were those statements made to emphasize the seriousness of this change. When ‘what ifs’ are eliminated and a question becomes a statement, you know there is a point waiting to be made and these will come out like loose cannons. They will get up in your face and challenge you.

‘You are making a foolish decision!’, ‘You are playing childish games with life!’, ‘You are so far from the only family you have and distancing yourself from your only source of support!’, ‘You need to start all over again’, ‘You will be alone out there!’, ‘You’re giving up a perfectly beautiful home!’.

It basically screamed, ‘Why would you live your life in the way that I wouldn’t or in the fearful way my mind lives it?’ Which is exactly the point. We are not living that life! None of us are. No-one wants nor dreams to live the life of a ‘what if’! They serve no purpose than to create major ripples in our lives or worse yet, colossal waves.

Eventually, the initial shock of the news subsides and our new adventure is somewhat accepted. However, the what ifs do not disappear. They maintain their ground until disproven for unless they are disproven, they remain a possibility. This is about the time the regular check-ins occur: ‘Do you like it?’, ‘Have you met anyone?’, ‘Have you generated any clients, leads?’, ‘When will ……. happen?’, ‘How will it happen?’

Worry, worry, worry!

It can be incredibly exhausting soothing others’ fears. What’s worse is disproving them which ultimately means we must not only promise that everything will work out perfectly but back it up with evidence. This can be intimidating and burdening for now the original impulse or inspiration of the dream has turned into an agonizing objective to prove it.

Most of the time, rather than focusing, imagining and moving toward the most invigorating and gratifying life experiences; we spend more time soothing others’ fears, explaining our choices, soothing others’ fears, justifying our actions, soothing others’ fears, proving our position, soothing others’ fears!

Sometimes some of our most exciting plans can make others a nervous wreck. Unless we are someone carefree and translucent to these types of fears, they can be quite deflating and damaging. The path that once looked bright and clear can quickly become obstructed with all sorts of obstacles and impediments that did not initially exist.

Often, we say these fears come from love and concern, when in fact this type of ‘love’ can decrease the momentum of strong, good flowing energy. More importantly, it is easy to lose direction when our inner intuitive guidance is drowned within the noise of mind-based chatter.

We do this with our partners by packing and stuffing guilt and fear-related thoughts; should these desires and impulses not go according to vision or plan. If they crumble at our constant pressures and all our negative fear-driven garbage along with demands of proof and promise, then they fail at being trusted.

We do this in particularly and most heavily with our children no matter what age we/they are because obviously, we/they will always be perceived as having less experience, be less perceptive, aware or knowledgeable than elders.

And we most certainly return the ‘favor’ to our parents through our frequent reminders of all the things they can and can’t do or should and shouldn’t do due to their age and fragility.

We spew what ifs, planting variety of worrisome thoughts all over the place suffocating and crippling genuine interests and desires.

We can’t seem to mind our own thoughts, our own fears and our own business. We do not like the feeling of fear-related thoughts but for some reason we stay there for days, weeks and even years crying our woes and sorrows and feeling victim to non-existing delusions.

Some of those interests that started off like a blazing flame diminish to a flicker. That grand dream we started running toward with power and excitement slowed to a walk and some of us even stopped and turned back altogether.

Momentum is lost through our what ifs!

Passion is lost through our what ifs!

Focus is lost through our what ifs!

More importantly, our present is lost through our what ifs!

When our focus has shifted to a bogus belief, it hinders our desire. It hinders our destination, journey and fire about it.

Often we are required to answer questions and provide guarantees to what ifs we cannot completely promise. However, our lives are not about fulfilling promises to others. They are about living joyfully and most authentically in whichever weird and wonderful way is befitting.

What ifs will show up. It should not make or break our choices. Ironically, none of these would show up as often if we were not already in the vicinity of them. We would not feel the fear of ‘what ifs’ if we were not already afraid of them. They would not be so easily acknowledged if we were not already seeing them.

The ‘what ifs’ do not exist! We make them up. We steal them from each other and use them somewhere else. We take notes, share them and store them in our memory. We repeat and recycle them and then await them anxiously, fearfully, sadly and angrily. Our fears are imagery. They are first imagined. They do not exist until we pluck them out of our imagination.

No matter what we decide for ourselves, when it feels exhilarating, then it is right where we need to be. When it feels enlivening, uplifting, exciting then we are ripe and ready for the experience. Provided we do only that which feels invigorating, all else is insignificant.

Fall deeply in love with life. Live it authentically, youthfully. Live like no-one is watching or you do not care who is watching! Even when the fears of others come barging in with all their dream-crushing stuff, do it anyway! Live it anyway!  

We are not required to listen to other people’s fears, and it is ok to get up and walk away or even hang up the phone if need be. Trust that everyone knows what is best for them. Trust that you know what is best for you. Trust that life will always deliver your every desire!

Maintain the feelings, thoughts and images that feel best. Be joyous. Don’t take life so seriously. It’s just life. Make it how you wish. Explore it and revel in all has to offer.

There are no rules or guidelines to how your life should be lived. That is human nonsense. Live like you are on vacation. Be free and curious. Trust that it is all working out. There are no obstacles other than the ones that exist in your mind.

Be the ultimate dreamer and visionary! Be the explorer and adventure seeker! Be the rock climber or ballet dancer. Be the single, unmarried mother or the married, gay father. Be an entrepreneur or volunteer worker.

Sleep under the stars, in a van, on the beach. Take a road trip around the country or sail around the world. Do things out of your comfort zone. Live outside the boundaries.

Live curiously! Live boldly! Live abundantly!

Live life like an announcement- not a question!