Does judging someone stand in the way of your accepting them fully?
We all have an inner judge developed over the years from the voices of our parents, our teachers, our leaders, our friends, our own judges. That voice is persistent and tries valiantly to assess everything. Sometimes it is quite useful ("should I really ride that motorcycle without a helmet?") and sometimes it siply gets in the way ("she seems nice but that hair is disgusting").
Our judge keeps us from realizing that most of the time we have more in common with each other than we have in opposition. Bridging that gap can help us build better teams, lead better projects, achieve our goals and solve our problems. But we do need to bridge that gap.
When we accept ourselves fully, we have more in common than we have to divide us.
Can you send your own inner judge out for just long enough to accept the people around you?
-- Douglas Brent Smith
We all have an inner judge developed over the years from the voices of our parents, our teachers, our leaders, our friends, our own judges. That voice is persistent and tries valiantly to assess everything. Sometimes it is quite useful ("should I really ride that motorcycle without a helmet?") and sometimes it siply gets in the way ("she seems nice but that hair is disgusting").
Our judge keeps us from realizing that most of the time we have more in common with each other than we have in opposition. Bridging that gap can help us build better teams, lead better projects, achieve our goals and solve our problems. But we do need to bridge that gap.
When we accept ourselves fully, we have more in common than we have to divide us.
Can you send your own inner judge out for just long enough to accept the people around you?
-- Douglas Brent Smith
Comments
Post a Comment