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Life

Human

I cannot un-see the dirty cheeks: the little toothless boy in the back of the ambulance. It was a bomb. How many of his family lay buried beneath the rubble, I’ll never know, I looked away. Every so often I see him there, though, that beautiful little boy in my mind. The Son of another, and yet, somehow, my Son, too.

We need to change, don’t we, before we explode ourselves into oblivion. I’ll be the broken record, again, and tell you that I don’t believe change can come from the blaming, shaming, incarcerating narrative we seem to have clung to as a so called intelligent species.

We’ve sent men to the moon.

And yet, still, we continue to feed our egos around the water cooler, blaming and shaming the perpetrators of crime, rather than working with our empathy to understand, and gently shift team humanity to a better place.

I know it’s hard. We are human, after all, we are designed to fight and defend: and thank goodness for that, or we’d never have survived our caveman days. I wonder if we might be able to think about it for a moment, though, perhaps use our hearts a little more in our decision making processes going forward?

What if, for a moment, rather than jumping to the attack, we looked into the humanity of the ‘monsters’. What if, for a moment, we saw criminals as humans, just like us, who believe different things, and do not know how to perceive any differently without a quiet (persistent) conversation. Will we change them by attacking them? No. I don’t believe so.

I always come back to a wonderful writing quote I learned when studying for my masters: Every villain is the hero of his own story. It’s true of understanding the inner workings of a good story, and it’s true of understanding the dark side of humanity. A person will not change if he believes he is acting for good. Many a villain does, in fact, act with the absolute belief that he is working for the good of someone. Unfortunately, there is often a loser. How do we fix this? I don’t know. But I know it’s not with anger and hate.

I wonder: is it time we looked at ourselves, finally, and admitted the truth. We’re on the same team. Can we not fight to save the lives of the murderers of the world, before they kill again? Can we not fight to see the point of view of the next car bomber, before he feels the need to play a game that nobody wins?

I wonder those things sometimes.

I might keep wondering about them some more.

Photo by Lisa Fotios on Pexels.com

By brookecutler2

Liver of life, lover of everything. 💕

5 replies on “Human”

When I was 15 I spent the entire summer thinking about war thanks to my world history class. By the end of summer, I couldn’t see anything other than gray. Each side believed they were the good guys, so there really is no hero or villain. It’s still where people get stuck, eternally believing only their ideas are right, and all it leads to is enormous pain for the whole world. I also wonder when we’ll be able to simply stop and think a little harder.

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I’m not surprised you did that Kat. That would have been my view back then, too. I can definitely see how people’s reactions arise but…yes. I really hope there will come a day where enough people will see the old ways just aren’t working for us. xx

Liked by 1 person

I envy people’s convictions, but I also think we need to start thinking differently if we’re ever going to evolve to be more than we are. I’m really hoping for the same, Brooke, so much.

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