Enlightened Conflict

indifference

December 28th, 2012

“The opposite of love is not hate, it’s indifference. The opposite of art is not ugliness, it’s indifference. The opposite of faith is not heresy, it’s indifference. And the opposite of life is not death, it’s indifference.” ― Elie Wiesel

Ok.

While I believe life, in general, is indifferent to our fate in life … I believe we should not be indifferent to our fate.

In other words … because Life is indifferent to us … it is up to us to actually make something happen … to not be indifferent.

In other words …

If you do nothing … you will gain nothing.

Well.

Actually. If you do nothing you will get less than nothing. Mostly because life is … well … indifferent. It will not pay attention to you unless you pay attention to it.

I say that because I think some people believe if they knew there would be no consequences for their actions they would lead a fuller life. They would have the courage to do more and take some chances.

Maybe have the courage to let themselves go forward. Maybe take some more risks <risks sometimes simply being things that move you even slightly out of your comfort zone … not big hairy audacious actions>.

And those people do nothing because they fear the consequences.

They have forgotten that Life is indifferent.

Here is the tricky thing about life.

It is kind of a trap.

Doing more, taking some chances, means more responsibility for actions.

It is simple math.

The more you ‘do’ the more shit you can be blamed for … or … given credit for <that is a Life formula I believe>.

Life is built to be stimulated. If you do not stimulate it … it is indifferent to you.

By the way.

Elie didn’t mean that when he said this.

While I may have made some valid life points … he was speaking about standing off to the side in Life and allowing bad to succeed over good.

And while being indifferent with regard to ourselves is a shame. In general it is harmless to anyone excepting ourselves.

But. If we are indifferent to life outside of us … and what is happening … you should be aware that bad, or evil, is not indifferent.

It is always active.

It is always opportunistic.

And in the end maybe that last point really is the big point about our Life.

Indifference permits that which is bad, which is always active, to win.

If you are indifferent hate, ugliness, heresy and despair … it will run your life. It will win.

Doing nothing means you lose.

That means that doing nothing, being indifferent, is not really taking the safe path … although it may feel so at the time. By being indifferent you permit all that is ‘not good’ to surround you … and smother you.

My point?
If we all did this, be indifferent, evil wins.

Heck.

If the majority of us did that, bad wins <in the bigger scheme of things>.

Frankly, I believe many of us think we are not indifferent … and yet we are.

Ok. Maybe selectively indifferent … but indifferent nonetheless.

I know I am <when I don’t pay attention>.

We should all pay a little more attention to indifference.

I know … I know. It can be difficult. Rightfully so we tend to focus on our lives and what is happening day to day. And I am not suggesting we shouldn’t. Because most of that is important.

But that may mean we become indifferent to other, pretty important things, swirling around us.

And maybe we do so assuming someone else is not indifferent.

And that is where I believe “bad” <ugliness, heresy, evil, etc.> is crafty. I believe they whisper in our selective indifferent ears suggesting “don’t worry, you don’t have time but someone else is not indifferent … THEY will make time.”

Bad is good at this. Bad is good at convincing us to let some responsibility slip to others.

Evil is everywhere and sly and relentless.

Sure.

It may seem tiring to know you cannot be indifferent … but for what is right, what is good, to win … we cannot let down our guard and be indifferent.

Even if you are indifferent personally you need to recognize Life needs people who are actively involved.

confidence adults & tweens

May 22nd, 2012

So.

Sometimes I write about something because I was thinking about it … but them sometimes a picture makes me write. This picture reminded me that a lot of teens & tweens feel this way <in fact … one posted this picture she made>.

This picture also reminded made me think about kids & confidence & resilience and the role us adults play in their success with all.

“Someone was hurt before you, wronged before you, hungry before you, frightened before you, beaten before you, humiliated before you, raped before you…yet, someone survived…You can do anything you choose to do.” – Maya Angelou

Growing up is tough (stating the obvious).

I began with Maya’s quote because I often believe that a tween/teen’s world is very small.  What I mean by that is that it often seems like the entire world is against you (as an individual) and that everything seems to revolve around you & only you in terms of issues, parents, the bully in the hallway and the mean chemistry teacher.

It is difficult as a tween to remember that others have been there (this little space in hell you seem to exist in) before you … and the others before you made it … yep … they all pretty much survived.

And, as a teen, you are still in the development stage with regard to the self confidence (and resilience) that will carry you through this seeming hell.

Self confidence is important in almost every aspect of our life but it is especially fragile in the tween years.

Think about this next thought (to compound that last thought).

At the same time the tween is struggling finding their own self confidence … there are many adults who are also struggling to find it.

Ok. That last thought is an important point. Because this self confidence struggle thing can be a vicious path. People who lack self-confidence can find it difficult to become successful – kids and adults. Therefore if we don’t invest the energy to get someone on the right path as a tween the likelihood of success (self confidence-wise) as an adult diminishes accordingly.

Low self-confidence is self-destructive. It often rears its head as negativity. And that is a slippery slope difficult to get off of when on it … therefore it begets itself all over  … and over … and, well, you get it.

So imagine the importance when you think about over and over (and how many times that cycles) if you permit it to begin at 12. Or 10. Or 15. Or … well … you get it.

Ok. So.

It seems like good ole Maslow suggested several things contribute to self-confidence — self-actualization (what I do) and self-esteem (what I feel/believe).

We gain a sense of self actualization when we see ourselves mastering something, gaining some skill and attaining some tangibleness  (a result?) to hold on to as actualization. This gives someone a tangible proof that they really don’t suck. That if you learn and work hard you can succeed.  Self actualization actually leads to accepting bigger and more difficult challenges and teaches resilience and persistence (and managing mistakes/failure).

And then there is self-esteem.  This is more a general sense that we can cope with what’s going on in our lives. And we feel good, or at least ‘good enough,’ about ourselves. Partially this comes from a feeling that the people around us approve of us. But it also comes from the sense that we’re competent at something and that we can compete successfully in the world by being who we are.

Some people believe that self-confidence can be built with affirmations and positive thinking.

Yikes.

There may be some truth in that, but I just cannot accept that self confidence can be all ‘fluff.’ You have to be good at something … have some competence at something. To me, without this underlying competence, you just have ‘empty’ (or maybe better said … ‘hollow’) self-confidence.

If you believe that, then self confidence in a tween is part mental and part doing.

And that means the truly difficult part is it is easy (or easier) to build self confidence if you focus on what you have achieved … but young people just don’t have the body of accomplishments to draw upon.

Oh.  The issue is exacerbated by the fact lack of self confidence typically leads to inaction.

Therefore this is an evil doom loop.

If true confidence (as you get older) shifts from a mental aspect to one drawing from a ‘deed’ (what you have done) aspect and yet, as a kid, your lack of confidence begets continuous non action (no deeds) … well … you are screwed (from a confidence standpoint).

Sure.

Someone could argue that you can build a portfolio of accomplishments to draw upon even at a young age … but it is different.

Frankly … a tween/teen needs to be less reliant on what they have done but rather start by managing their mind. Learn to defeat the negative self-talk which can destroy confidence.

And this is where us old folk play a HUGE role.

“Mind” stuff is fragile.  And we tend to be ‘realistic’ or “manage the mind” differently because … well … of our perspective.  Because we are supposed to be ‘practical’ adults. We aren’t really wrong in how we look at it … but we are maybe wrong for who and what is going on.

Let me remind you of a Lao Tzu quote: “Kindness in words creates confidence”.

Now.

I am not suggesting we need to pamper kids …  maybe just pamper their dreams & hopes?

Maybe it is not even pamper … maybe it is just caring.

I saw some findings from the Tween Confidence Index  and the results were clear: tween confidence is short-lived, yet can be safe-guarded by maintaining strong communication between tweens and their parents. In fact, the majority of tweens surveyed found talks with their parents to be “very helpful,” and there was a measurable relationship between tweens’ confidence levels and the value they placed on these talks.

“The Unilever Tween Confidence Index reveals just how critical parent communication is to help tweens transition into competent, confident teenagers. By keeping the lines of communication open, parents can minimize the decline in self-esteem that we know begins around age 12 or 13.” – Rosalind Wiseman, internationally recognized educator.

Some facts for my parent/adult readers from The Unilever Tween Confidence Index, conducted by KRC Research:

-          A majority of tweens (69 percent) find talks with their parents to be “very helpful” in dealing with the pressures and challenges they face.

-          Tweens are most stressed about hearing rumors about themselves or friends (68 percent), getting good grades (61 percent), dealing with hard teachers (68 percent) and their first kiss (51 percent).

So <this is a fairly big thought coming at you next>.

We may not feel like we are saying the rights things but more often than not we are doing the right thing by trying to say the right things.

While you can’t stop a child from harshly judging how their abilities and bodies match up to others, there are a number of ways we can make a positive impact.

Because confidence to a kid doesn’t happen overnight.  It is built little by little … thought by thought.

And each positive thought ultimately creates the resiliency which is at the foundation of anyone’s confidence.

And a tween can never start building the resiliency characteristic early enough.

Because life is relentless at that age. Frickin’ relentless. Here is the definition of ‘resilience’:

Resilience: Resilience is the ability to work with adversity in such a way that one comes through it unharmed or even better for the experience.

That means having the ability to face whatever Life decide to throw at you … and refuse to give up 9keep on moving). Resilience is what allows a kid to move beyond whatever misfortune, hardship, mistake or …. at its worst … an emotional or psychological trauma (an extremely stressful or life-threatening situation or abuse) a child may face.

Resilience is, in some ways, about tenacity and fortitude and character. Having the character to find the determination to embrace all that makes life worth living … even in the face of dire events.

An aspect of resiliency has to be a belief for ‘something better’ which can be embodied in a vision or purpose.

I tell kids – everyone faces adversity. Everyone. Adversity is an equal opportunity employer.

Resilience is especially important during the tween years when children face new academic challenges, pressure and rejection from peers, and increasing awareness of their own limitations. Resilient children bounce back well after they face these issues. They are less likely to develop depression, anxiety or unhealthy coping mechanisms like aggression, eating issues and substance problems. Some characteristics that encourage resilience are innate – such as intellectual ability.

“If you voluntarily quit in the face of adversity, you’ll wonder about it for the rest of your life.” – Bill Clinton

Truer words have probably never been spoken.

And every tween should be told this (by an adult). Even if the adult is struggling with their own self confidence. We owe it to them to at least show them the way.

It is our responsibility, yes, our responsibility … to create opportunities for tweens (young people) to develop a positive self-concept. Praise. Listen. Take interest. Show respect.

Allow them the opportunity to develop their own sense of self and self confidence.

For we don’t want them to follow in our footsteps … we want them to go beyond our footsteps.

Enlightened Conflict