Category Archives: Thoughts On Life

Unique and Interesting Observations or Perspectives

Humanity for the Poor

The Holocaust started because Hitler convinced an entire nation that a certain class of citizen didn’t deserve human rights.  That they were inhumane.  That we shouldn’t see them eye to eye.

In America, one of the first lessons you learn when you enter the city life is to ignore the homeless.  Keep walking, don’t make eye contact, don’t get harassed, don’t acknowledge them.  Sentence them to eventual death by poverty.

We need some humanity for the poor.

However, at the same time, we need humanity for the rich.  Too often when someone who is better off complains or expresses negative emotion, we the poorer do not emphasize with them or validate their right to have emotions because “they are richer, just solve it with their money. Try dealing with being poor: your emotions aren’t valid unless you’re poor.”  This is also wrong.  We need humanity not just for the poor, but for all of us.

We also need humanity for the middle class.  What often happens in the middle class is that they disrespect each other because they aren’t rich or poor so they don’t deserve a second thought.  The middle class then focuses on the rich and/or the poor rather than on each other.  Take care of those you’re in contact with, focus on your own life and care for others in your life.

Thanksgiving 2014: Criticism and Appreciation

In a previous post I said Skill is the Sum of Small Details. Building on this, we can conclude that with more skill comes more details and in particular the awareness of more details: While cooking beef you now notice the color of the beef instead of relying purely on the clock set by the recipe.  While picking up a cup of water you notice not just the shape of the cup but the material and temperature and adjust the strength of your grip accordingly.  

For people who lack that level of detail in their skill, they don’t notice.  And because they don’t notice, they don’t optimize.  The beef is done cooking before the timer has gone off because the cook didn’t notice the detail that the stove heat was set to one level higher than last time.  Someone crushes the cup because he or she expected it to be ceramic and heavy but it was actually paper weak.

As you become more aware of details, your personal skills improve and your own life improve.  However, when it comes to interacting with others, now you have more data to judge others with, and we all know that it is all too easy to judge other people: it is one of the most fundamental human natures we have.  As a result when someone else is cooking beef and they aren’t paying attention to the color of the beef but you have the skill to, then you will notice them doing it wrong.  If someone’s paper cup looks like something from origami, you know they haven’t adjusted their grip properly.

When you see these things, you can be critical or you can be appreciative.  You did see a mistake being made, but you also see correct decisions being made: the heat was on for the beef and the timer was set to the right time according to the recipe, or the cup was right side up and wasn’t flipped and liquids weren’t spilled in the process.  Rather than using your skills and awareness of details to find things that are wrong and criticize, use your skills and awareness of details to find things that are right and appreciate.

Please be reasonable in your appreciative comments.  “Nice, the recipe for the beef you chose is good” is a good appreciative comment.  “Nice, your beef is better than nothing” is a very unreasonable appreciative comment.

Happy Thanksgiving!

One final thing to note: be aware of yourself and the impression you give others. If you are someone who always criticizes then people won’t like being around you. If you are someone who encourages people, appreciates their good qualities and make them want to show their good qualities more often, they will want to be around you and both your lives will be improved.

Check out AttemptedLiving’s Life Education Curriculum, a collection of core knowledge everyone should have.

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Skill is the Sum of Small Details

Many people, when they almost succeed but don’t because of a small detail, downplay the small detail’s role as a reflection of a lack of skill.  Instead, they claim to have the skills necessary to succeed but that they were unlucky.  The chance of that small detail occurring was too small to warrant preparing for, and therefore they have the skill to succeed in most cases.  

To that I say: Yes, you have the skill to achieve in most cases, but it is important to note that experienced professionals take care of the small details and can succeed in more than most cases. In fact, that’s what you pay them for, and that’s where they demonstrate their experience and skill: in their ability to handle the small details.  Anyone can follow a recipe and cook an egg, but it is in the small details of how you execute each step that a professional chef can be distinguished from an amateur cook.  To explain it another way: the more times you follow the same recipe, the more chances you have of making mistakes, and the more chances you have of gaining experience on how to correct the mistakes that you see happening.  Therefore, an experienced cook following the same recipe as an amateur cook will cook a better meal because when a “small detail” comes up, the experienced cook will know how to take care of the small detail while the amateur will not.

Therefore, if you seek to become truly skilled, it is not right to distance yourself from responsibility and place blame on the small detail.  Rather, take responsibility for the small details since they have significant enough impacts to cause you to fail.  Think about that last statement: if the detail was important enough to cause you to fail, doesn’t that make it a rather important detail and not a small one?  As such, there is no such thing as a small detail: if it impacts the outcome, it is a major detail that you over looked and should plan for and protect against in the future.   What is skill but the culmination of a bunch of small details?

This post is part of AttemptedLiving’s Life Education Curriculum, a collection of core knowledge everyone should have.  See the “Life Philosophy” section.

To find out when those posts, and other life education writing, are released, subscribe on the side! Follow on Twitter, on Facebook, on Google+, on Tumblr.