Saturday, November 23, 2024

True, Necessary, Kind

 
"Before you speak, let your words pass through three gates:

At the first gate ask yourself, 'Is it true?'

At the second gate ask, 'Is it necessary?'

At the third gate ask, 'Is it kind?'"

- Jalal al-Din Muhammad Rumi

One of the rather unworthy and un-Christian habits that I struggle with and have struggled with over the years is the smart comment.

This is probably an outcome of a number of factors in my life. One is the fact that I am, by all accounts (including my own), a pleaser of people; I desperately, desperately want people to like me (even now, in my late 50's.  Go figure.).  The second, tied to the first, is that I find my ability to please largely based in humor:  I can turn a phrase or make a joke out of almost anything like nobody's business.  

This becomes problematic, of course, when one engages one's mouth without engaging one's brain.  I used to be awful at this; now I am tolerantly bad at it.  It is an improvement, but not much of one.

Most of the time - most of it mind you - I can manage to think about what I am going to say before I say it.  That said, sometimes my nature to turn a phrase and get the immediate laugh overpowers my need to shut my mouth and let the moment pass.

I should know better, of course.  I severely damaged one friendship with such behavior in 2014, almost to the point of breaking it.  And the number of times that comments have rung hollow in my ears after I made them is too numerous to count.   In my case, less is probably more.

I have heard the above phrase before (but never knew it was from the Poet Rumi, whose tomb in Konya we will visit in a few weeks).  But it was certainly enough to see them in their full quote.

It strikes me that this sort of metric - true, necessary, kind - is precisely the sort of thing we have lost in our modern society.  Truth has become a matter of debate; necessary is "necessary to me to be able to speak my mind"; kindness is something for which people like quotes on Instapic and The Book of Face but too often seldom put into practice.

If I "struggle" with the three items, it is most often with necessary.  Truth I can (generally) get right (I am often accurate, if not precise), and I am enough of my mother's son to know how to be kind.  But necessary?  In writing "necessary to me to be able to speak my mind" I condemn myself:  so much of what I say, especially the parts that get laughs and in theory make me more likeable, are hardly "necessary" to most discussions.

It makes me wonder:  What would it be like if I tried to apply these principles for a day?  For a week?  Could I last as long as week?

What if everything I said - if everything everyone said - was true, necessary, and king?  What kind of world would that be?  

Probably a lot quieter, I would guess. And hopefully, a lot nicer.

8 comments:

  1. I consider myself a fairly witty fellow too but that it doesn't come across much in group situations as by the time I self monitor my words through those three mental gates, the subject has moved well past where the humor was directed. So perhaps a fourth gate would be, "Is it still relevant?"

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    1. Ed, that is not a bad fourth gate. I am aware that I often try to go "back" in the conversation to make an amusing comment, although I am getting better about realizing when the conversation has moved on and just going with the flow.

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  2. "Let no unwholesome word proceed from thy mouth, but only such a word that is good for edification." A memory verse we taught our kids, and I learned as a result. "...according to the need of the moment, that it may give grace to those who hear." It's a struggle, even after 43 years of attention.

    We share the likeableness trait as well as the comical retort trait. I know where my need for that sprang from. I felt like I didn't belong, even in my own family. I was taller than everyone, had a pronounced accent no others had, and was treated much differently for most of my home years. It put me behind the 8-ball in my own head.

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    1. STxAR - I am aware that if I actually just went with words that were good for edification, I would likely have almost nothing to say. Maybe that would be for the best.

      I once had a friend - many years ago - comment that I used humor not as a shield but as a bulkhead, a fundamental part of my personality to keep others at bay. I suspect they were right, and remain right.

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  3. Nylon128:50 AM

    More than one person I've run across, after issuing a "smart comment" said that "I'm an honest person, I have to say what I think." No, no you don't buddy, remember the word "filter" next time before you speak. There are always a few people who never took the Golden Rule to heart TB.

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    1. Nylon12 - Like you, I have discovered that the concept of "honesty" is often used as a decoy for giving any opinion under the sun because "honesty" is theoretically important. I will also note that such "honesty" seldom is reciprocal: the "honest" do not like "honesty" in return.

      Have I had those conversation before? Yes - but they are very infrequent and make me highly uncomfortable when having them. Which is probably as it should be.

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  4. Anonymous12:45 PM

    Best friend for the last 50 years has said the words "I desperately, desperately want/need people to like me" to me more times than I could count. And like her they did, 5'2, eyes of blue and natural blond curly hair. Bright smile. She could make 20 people laugh. Everybody was her friend. But, behind closed doors that was her performing. Mom had taught her well that no one would like her if she wasn't "cute". We were yin and yang. I miss her to this day as Alzheimer's has her now.

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    1. Anon - I am so sorry to hear about your friend. Alzheimer's is a horrible thing.

      The need to be liked is something that I suspect many people do not understand. It is not just a nice to have; for the truly desperate it literally determines how every day and every event will go.

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Comments are welcome (and necessary, for good conversation). If you could take the time to be kind and not practice profanity, it would be appreciated. Thanks for posting!