Integrity, Positivity and Good Manners
This is a difficult piece to write. It has been on my mind for a very long time
and I have been searching for the words to express my intent. It borders very closely upon political
agendas, but those are not my sole premise.
For those of you who know me you are aware that I deliberately avoid
such discussion. Civil discourse is
non-existent on social media and I prefer such discussions face to face in a
non-threatening and comfortable environment.
I am certainly not apolitical, but I make no attempt to foist my beliefs
on others. I prefer to believe that
people are inherently intelligent enough to make their own determinations. I would not dare to presume that it’s “my way
or the highway,” but I believe that more and more of the population certainly
believes that old adage. Let me approach
this slippery slope on three different levels.
Integrity. It is my belief that integrity is the
most important of the tenets to follow.
If there is no integrity and honesty in making life choices it becomes
irrelevant and meaningless. Robert L.
Woodrum wrote: “You have the right to
remain silent, but you can never repeat, never lie or shade the truth.” Samuel Johnson wrote: “Integrity without
knowledge is weak and useless, and knowledge without integrity is dangerous and
dreadful.” We live in an age of instant
news. A leaf falls in Peru and it is on
the 10 o’clock news. Headline: Peruvian Leaf Falls! Global Warming Imminent!
Facebook is full of (dare I say it!) fake news that is deliberately
satirical. The problem is that
individuals read it and take it as the gospel truth. What does this have to do with integrity, you
ask? What you have to examine is the
intent of the “news.” Therefore, I
maintain that the integrity has to do with first the writer of the piece and
secondly the one who passes it on. The
written word carries great power and when literacy became the norm it became
even more powerful. Consider John
Wesley. It can foment hope and it can
also foment fear. I remember the fear
that gripped many when John F. Kennedy became president it was widely believed
that the Vatican would be running the country because of reckless journalism
and sermons full of hysteria. Lack of
integrity among those who inform us is dangerous as well as those who pass it
on. The naysayers, the doomsday crowd,
the agenda driven individuals, the heretics and others carry loaded words that
can seriously harm. Visions of dead
children, pushing grandma off the cliff, racist innuendo, collapse of social
structure all contribute to the fear that often grips us. What often occurs is that those fears are put
out there, but no solution is offered.
Disagreement is fine.
Disagreement without solution is not fine.
POSITIVITY. Willie
Nelson said, “Once you replace negative thoughts with positive ones, you’ll
start having positive results.” The
Dalai Lama wrote, “In order to carry a positive action we must develop here a
positive vision.” Easily said, you say,
but I believe those are powerful words.
When a positive spin is put on certain situations it often transforms
the scenario. That does not mean to say
that we should always walk around with a rainbow on our shoulders, but rather
look for that elusive silver lining. I
like Walt Disney’s quotation on optimism.
“I always like to look on the optimistic side of life, but I am
realistic enough to know that life is a complex matter.” I believe that one needs to be aware that
life’s bed of roses will always have some thorns. We need to all cease being Eeyores with
woebegone attitudes, but rather emulate Pooh and be happy with our jar of
honey. Actually, I prefer being a Tigger
and bounce through life with abandon and glee.
Realistically we should all strive to be like Christopher Robin, full of
logic and love.
Good Manners. Realizing that what passes as good
manners varies among different cultures I will limit myself to what I consider
to be good manners in the American culture.
However, I will say that it behooves us to be cognizant of different
traditions and actions. For example,
while living in Thailand we were careful not to touch anyone of the shoulders
or head and not show the bottom of my feet in public. In this country there is a basic set of good
manners. I know “times they are
a’changing,” but good manners boils down to respect for others. We have become a nation of people who puts
their elbows on the table and uses the cell phone at the table. Doors aren’t opened, eye contact is
non-existent and blatant disrespect is rampant.
I can hear you shouting to me through the computer, “RESPECT MUST BE
EARNED!” That’s true, but disrespect is
never appropriate. I have not watched
late night TV for years because of the disrespect shown for our national
figures. You can run right down the line
of past presidents who were victims of the barbs of erstwhile comics. Kennedy was a womanizer, Johnson and Bush
were hicks from Texas, Carter was a peanut farmer, Clinton was (fill in the
blanks), Obama was a wimp on international affairs and Trump is (fill in the
blanks.) I must say that I have never
witnessed such vitriol spewed as with Presidents Obama and Trump. What really bothers me is how this is affecting
the youth of our country. What bothers
me even more is that some parents are even encouraging disrespect. People are seeing this around the world and
that is discouraging. We are losing
civility. Those very ones who carry the
banner of free speech are the ones denying it.
Ironic, no? Despite all this I
remain confident in our country. The
number of good and loving people far outweighs the others.
The Golden Rule is the answer. Treat others as you would have them treat
you. Diversity is a gift. Rejoice in our differences and celebrate our
freedoms and opportunities. First and
foremost maintain you integrity, your positivity and good manners.
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