There is a spiritual
phenomenon which occurs regarding judgment, and I have been dealing with it a
great deal lately. I think it is safe to
say that when material stresses intrude on the mind it makes it more difficult
to think clearly. The spiritual masters
will confirm this fact; if you judge someone else: it will happen to you. More than a few times in my life this has
been a near instant phenomenon. I would
judge someone, and then find myself in the same exact situation, but from the
perspective of the one I judged. It is
something we all must deal with.
In my own experience
it is a difficult situation because I am quite naturally critical. All of us have critical abilities, some
greater than others. When I was younger
my critical way of thinking created quite a problem in my own life. For one, people do not like criticism. It is often quite difficult for people to
hear because their emotions are so closely tied to their thoughts. Anytime I speak, it is critical, that is
simply how my mind works, and most people, most of the time, think I am being
judgmental. Two, this caused me to feel
quite flawed when I was younger, because not many people like someone who
thinks critically 100% of the time. I
had the emotional belief that if I was healed and whole everyone would like me. I was judging myself quite critically you see, which is never a good thing. The real issue though is realizing the
difference between judgment and criticism.
Years ago I was
talking on the phone with a friend. This
friend, let's call her Lisa, was asking for my help in critiquing up a situation
involving another person that she was dealing with. If I remember correctly it was her mother. It is funny how people like my
ability to be hyper critical when I direct it at someone else. I have an uncanny ability to size people up
rather quickly, but only because I have a life time of being so critical coupled with studying people. Like all things, practice makes perfect. In my critique of this individual I said that
the person was lonely, and because of that loneliness they were acting a
certain way.
Lisa did not like
how her mother was acting, but became upset because I called her mother
lonely. Can you see it? That is what makes it a judgment. She was upset, which means she was
judging. Her emotional content was
preventing her from acknowledging reality.
I was merely critiquing the situation so that Lisa could have a better
understanding of what was going on, which is exactly what she asked me to
do. All of us could have said the same
thing about this person. The behavior she was demonstrating made it
quite obvious looking in from the outside.
I was admitting to a fact, Lisa was being judgmental. This judgment on her part kept her from
seeing the reality of the situation at that time. That is precisely what happens to all of us
when we judge. It is a failure
to see things clearly, which is why it will happen to us when we do
it, so that we may learn our lesson. That
phenomenon in and of itself is proof of spirituality being a part of reality. Karma in effect.
I did not have an
emotional response to loneliness. It
just is. I was quite lonely myself when this conversation occurred. I was just pointing out what was obvious to
me. When people are lonely they do
things they often would not otherwise do, which was exactly what was happening
to me, as well as Lisa's mother, as well as most people on the planet. I was doing quite a few things I
would not normally do because I was lonely.
The greater the loneliness the more dramatic the behavior one will display. Most people will be judgmental in this
situation and say negative things about the lonely person. The easiest example is the person who talks
and talks and talks, which was something I was known for myself. I would talk a persons head off if they let me, not because I loved to talk so much, but because I was lonely.
Most people will
only judge what it is they see on the surface, like the bad behavior Lisa's
parent was displaying, or like the person who talks too much. Instead of looking deeper into the issue which creates the
unhealthy behavior in the first place people will typically just speak
negatively about the surface behavior.
Lisa was upset because to her, loneliness is bad, so that meant I was
saying something bad about this person she cared about. That is judgment. She was also judging me, which was obvious by
her emotional response to my critique.
Criticism is simply observing what is and commenting on it. If your hair is black, and I point this out,
it is a critique of the situation, not a judgment. Now, if I say your hair is black and I
dislike or like black hair, that is judgment.
One's hair being black is free of personal opinion. It is neither good nor bad.
Loneliness is not
good or bad either. It just is. There are a great many things that humans
need to know about life that cannot be learned unless we are lonely. If loneliness teaches us things we can't
otherwise learn, how can we say it is bad?
We would be doomed to a certain level of ignorance if we never delve
into our own loneliness. If one were to
closely pay attention they would realize this is exactly what is occurring with
most people. They never grow past a
certain level because they never face their own loneliness. I think the same thing applies to
suffering. Almost everyone is in a state
of judgment regarding suffering, but humans cannot improve without it, so how
can it be bad? If no one ever suffered,
no one would ever grow. Almost everyone
I know avoids suffering like their life depends on it, yet in actuality their
life depends on them suffering. Most are
blind to this phenomenon.
The world is upside
down. I feel quite safe in saying this
is one of the reasons so many are what I call children in grown up bodies. The masses fear fundamental aspects in life
that cause us to grow and be better people so they avoid them at all
costs. Almost everyone is avoiding the
teacher; suffering. Almost everyone is
judging instead of merely acknowledging things for what they are free of
opinion. Which to me seems to be the
mature thing to do. It is not my opinion
if I say a lonely person is lonely, it just is.
In Lisa's case, her judgment of her mother’s loneliness was only further
causing her mother to be lonely. Her
judgment projected negative energy towards her mother when all her mother
really needed was to be better understood by those she loved. Lisa did not yet understand that by removing
her opinion of the situation she would have actually been helping her mother
deal with her own loneliness. Who is not
a little less lonely simply by being a little better understood by one in
proximity?
All this said, I am
not saying that negative things do not happen because of loneliness. It most certainly happens, and it happens a
lot. A great many people harm themselves
tremendously because of their own perceived loneliness.
The idea is to see this phenomenon for what it is free of our own
emotional content. Having an opinion is
easy. Anyone can do that without putting
forth any effort whatsoever. Looking
deeply enough into things to see them for what they are, free of one’s own
emotional content, is another matter entirely.
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