Saturday, May 23, 2015

Right and Wrong?

As many have written and talked about previously, life can be looked at as a series of choices. The right and wrong choice is sometimes clear and sometimes muddled, and often we have not only right and wrong to weigh but other varying degrees of more-or-less-right and more-or-less-wrong choices in the middle to ponder. I’d like to explore a bit about the right to make your own choice and live your own values and the duty to respect that right in others. This is especially applicable in recovery and sobriety because as a recovering addict I cannot afford to often be caught in the trap of taking another’s inventory or trying to impose my own values on anyone else.

There do exist scenarios in this life where right and wrong are clear-cut and indisputable, but they are few and far between. Theft? Rape? Abuse? Murder? In a traditional sense these crimes against other humans are not defensible, but in our society the line has become so blurred even in all of those cases that there no longer exists an absolute and concrete idea of any of them, it seems. If we are fortunate, in the course of a typical human life we won’t be directly faced with these situations often if at all.  

Bigotry and hatred? That's a bit of a different story. If I am wrong it is only due to ignorance, but I am not aware that any belief structure or group ideology that enables or encourages this type of thought and action belongs to any group that is worthy of any respect or subscription. That is to say that no one, right, left or in the middle (with most of us) has the right to perpetrate hatred upon his or her fellow humans. The basic human right to live free from bigotry, persecution and the spiritual sickness of hatred is the fabric that makes up this post. 

Our struggles exist between the extremes in the day-to-day living with our fellow humans. We bicker, judge and pontificate from our side of the fence and spend more time obsessed with why “the other guy” is wrong than we do with our own right living. We obsess over our witty, "quippy" online image more than we attend to our daily interactions with other humans in the physical world. After all, if I can one-up the other side with my fanatical re-posting of social commentaries, then I’ll eventually bombard them into conversion, RIGHT?!

We all basically feel that we are right in our beliefs and (at least some of the time) in our actions; since wrong is the opposite or right, anyone who doesn’t agree with us has to be wrong, we surmise, and that is as far as many of us ever get. But what if I was to tell you that what is right for me might not be right for you (and vise-versa) but that doesn’t make me (or you) wrong (or right)? My truth is mine, yours is yours and they can both be right for us and not right for each other.

If your truth doesn’t harm me, then how does it hurt me to let you live it without trying to convince you with endless barrages of words (written, spoken, sung, re-posted, Tweeted or texted) to change? In truth, my actions are the only voice you should ever hear. If my actions convey to you that I live a life of fulfillment and happiness and you are interested in how or why, I’d be happy to share that with you. If not, I’d be happy to just be happy and let you do your thing.

Now, this isn’t to say that everyone is right and no one is wrong; this is to say that you and I are not in a position to impose our personal values and beliefs on others in the form of judgement. Understand that this judgement comes from all sides, although society is most quick to point out the judgement of the religious due to centuries of feeling beaten down by extra-doctrinal and controlling dogma. It would be inaccurate to say that even the irreligious don’t have their own brand of belief and can be just as caught up in pointing out how wrong and unintelligent they think the religious types are as those religious types can be in condemning them to an eternity in Hades.

It would seem that social commentary today doesn’t inspire thought and change so much as rage and separation. If we all become too busy being on a side to just love each other, before too long we will all only be on our own “side” and life will be wasted in joyless isolation. For the addict, this isolation will quickly lead to misery and death.

Right or wrong, we are all in this together. Step away from your computer, your pulpit or podium and be too busy living rightly and loving fully to obsess about how wrong everyone else is. What might you do if in the course of the day you somehow find yourself to be wrong in a situation (you will)? Promptly admit it and get right. Then, do the right thing the next time you get a chance.

Simple. Peaceful. Right. Together.

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