“The essence of love and compassion is understanding, the ability to recognize the physical, material, and psychological suffering of others, to put ourselves “inside the skin” of the other. We “go inside” their body, feelings, and mental formations, and witness for ourselves their suffering. Shallow observation as an outsider is not enough to see their suffering. We must become one with the subject of our observation. When we are in contact with another’s suffering, a feeling of compassion is born in us. Compassion means, literally, “to suffer with.”~ Thich Nhat Hanh
I have always considered myself to be kind. Generally good. Easily forgiving and accepting of others. I am quick to join those who fight injustice with my time and treasure. I am hopeful and trusting, perhaps naively so, in the goodness of others. And I am honest. Honest to a fault some say. Which brings me to this.
Why do I feel so disconnected from the world right now?
This world of 24-hour news feeds, polarized ideals, political unrest, tragedy, conflict and greed. Well the answer might seem obvious. I have little in common with the world I just described. All that despair and suffering of others somewhere over there has little to do with me…except..except, the truth is, it does. I am them. At least this is how it is if I truly am who I say that I am. Nothing happens to others without also happening to me. And that is my dilemma, because it all feels too horrible and big for one person. And I am not sure what to do. I could pray as some suggest, but I’m not completely sure anyone is listening. Humanity has suffered the scourge of adversity since the beginning of time.
Slowly, methodically I have been shutting down, shutting the ugly world out so I don’t have to know about it…or care. I have tried turning off the cable news, filling my corner of the world with routine and beauty. I have avoided reading newspapers and online commentaries, turning to books instead. I work every day, and celebrate life in the little day to day ways that we all do…dinner with family, birthdays, weddings, births and even death, remembering the blessing of a life fully lived. What more could possibly be expected of me?
And as I ponder that question I realize that the answer lies in the truth that I am trying desperately not to care what happens somewhere, over there, to others. But the thing is, I do. Because I am them and they are me and we’re in this mess together.
How do I reconnect? It’s not up to me to change the world! I couldn’t even if I tried. Who am I after all to think I could move the needle or make a difference? Who am I indeed!
Well, I am kind. Kindness helps when the need for help presents itself. Kindness smiles. It lets the mom with grumpy kids cut in line, it reads a story, it carries someone’s groceries, it shares a sweater, it holds a door.
And I am forgiving and accepting. Forgiveness chooses not to judge when wronged. Forgiveness allows me to give others the grace to learn the lessons of their own journey without trying to hurry them along, my way. Forgiveness helps me to let go. I can accept that we may not be in the same place or believe the same thing, and that is okay. Oh and one more thing. Forgiveness means forgiving myself too. For whatever. Being good is not dependent on perfection.
To reconnect, I can do what I can where I am. Small things can have a huge impact. I don’t need to be everywhere to care, to promote justice, to work for peace. But I can inhabit those things. I can be caring in every encounter I have with those around me. I can be justice through honesty and truthfulness and I can be peace. And those things that are happening somewhere else? Well, they are part of the journey of learning to connect for those who live there. We all have a role to play.
It might not seem like a lot, but it’s a big deal. The poor, the sick, the outcasts, the refugees, war, conflict, greed…these things will always be with us. It takes courage and humility to care. To feel what others are feeling in suffering as well as joy, to put myself “inside the skin” of others. By virtue of my humanity I already have everything I need. I just need to remember who I am.
Namaste’ Fellow Humans 😊





September 9th, 2015 at 1:25 am
Kat, this is beautiful!!
Who are you to change the world–indeed, who are you NOT to? Each of us has the power to change the world, and we wield this power by being ALL of who we are, as you describe in this post. What else are you? How can you honor all of it?
I wonder if you saw Donna Cameron’s recent post discussing the contagiousness of behavior?http://ayearoflivingkindly.com/2015/09/02/brace-yourself-for-an-epidemic-of-bad-behavior/
By being your kind, forgiving, accepting and writeful self, you definitely influence those around you–including everybody who reads your work, not to mention those lucky enough to know our physical presence.
So glad to know you here, write on! 😀 xo
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September 9th, 2015 at 6:46 am
Awesome post by Donna Cameron Catherine! Thank you for the link! Truly empowered now to face my day with kindness! 😀
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September 9th, 2015 at 2:27 pm
I shut down often times too, so that I can retain my sanity and not detest humanity – after all I am part of humanity. Lovely post.
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September 9th, 2015 at 3:07 pm
The same day I posted this, a friend of mine posted a photo of a woman in Hungary who had positioned herself on a major highway into the country. She had food and water for refugees that might be passing her way. I saw that and thought, brilliant! She is doing what she can where she is, just as I can do my part here. With that, my faith in humanity was restored, empowering me to stay in the race another day. Peace to you! 🙂
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September 9th, 2015 at 3:17 pm
Wow! That’s really a heartwarming gesture.
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September 9th, 2015 at 3:20 pm
😊
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September 10th, 2015 at 7:35 am
Kat, I wandered over by way of your comment on Cathy’s blog and I am so glad to have discovered your blog! I too feel overwhelmed by the always-on news cycle and have to turn it off. As a highly sensitive person, I reach my saturation point rather quickly.
“To reconnect, I can do what I can where I am. Small things can have a huge impact.” Yes! This reminds me of a wonderful essay by Alice Walker and her image of the great heroes as boulders, and while we can’t all be great heroes, we can each carry a stone, small and imperfect though it may be (http://www.scu.edu/ethics/architects-of-peace/Walker/essay.html).
Thank you for the inspiration today!
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September 10th, 2015 at 8:47 am
Hi Nancy,
It is so nice to connect with you. And thank you for the link to Alice Walker’s essay. Like you, I need to recharge myself with other’s words when the outside noise becomes too much. Have a wonderful day today. Opportunities abound around every corner for us to be our best selves! 🙂
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