Friday, September 30, 2016

Invitation to Civil Discourse 2


Invitation to Civil Discourse

What can I do to help restore civility and sanity to this chaotic cacophony of discord and hate-filled diatribes? What is my personal responsibility? Where do I begin to help create a healthier conversation and more positive relationships among friends, family, and community?

When I look back over a long history of political awareness, I have been voting since 1960, I am not particularly proud of all my “contributions” to the public forum. As of late I have consciously stepped back and intentionally asked myself, before any comment or action, what is the appropriate response to what I hear and see going on in the world around me. This is what I have chosen to be my guide, knowing I will not always live up to the guideline but committing myself to consciously trying.

Teaching world religions I discovered many positive moral admonitions and assistance for daily living. The one before me today is the Zoroastrian creed: good thoughts, good words, good deeds. I remind myself everyday of this ancient wisdom, check my thoughts/words/deeds from yesterday, and recommit myself to strive to live up to the goals today.

When I stop and think about it, it makes rational sense and emotional satisfaction. Our thoughts are the beginning of all that follows. Now I don’t beat myself up over “bad” thoughts that enter my mind. Honestly, I know I cannot control what pops into my head. It is like a foul smell that blows through the window. I can quickly close the window. I can blow the smell out of the room, dismissing it in the quickest way possible. A bad thought is like that to me. I don’t have to entertain it any longer that it takes me to dismiss it.

Then it is my decision as to what I will say about the idea/issue. The tongue is a powerful organ, but I control it. More than once I have reaped the consequences of hasty, negative words. I have hurt others, for which I am sorry. The old adage, “words will never hurt me,” isn’t true. Words do harm, with invisible wounds that often do not heal. I am not advocating never speaking up. MLK was right; silence in the face of injustice is complicity. Careful discernment is required.

Then, in logical order, actions will follow words. When I look and listen to the world around me, and I see how others act, what they do, I listen to their words (shouts, screams, posters). it is not a great leap to recognize the thoughts (prejudices, bigotry, perspectives) that drive them. I must examine myself, my motives, before making accusations and retaliating in like kind.

May I borrow from another tradition?  May the WORDS of my mouth, the meditations (THOUGHTS) of my heart, and the DEEDS of my hands be acceptable, love-filled,  and guided by compassion.

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