Seeking To Understand

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Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
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My friend Julie and her husband argue about the “right” way to do laundry: he loads the washing machine with dirty clothes, adds a cup of detergent on top, turns on the machine, and walks away. Julie, on the other hand, is a firm believer in starting the water flow, pouring-in the soap, and then adding the dirty clothes to the mix. They both want the same end result: clean clothes, but they go about it differently because his priority is minimal effort and to be done as quickly as possible, while Julie's priority is to make sure the soap fully dissolves in the water before adding the clothes. 
 
It reminds me of working in the kitchen at the monastery, where two members of the kitchen staff were asked to peel and cut ten pounds of carrots into small matchstick-sized strips. It took them about four hours, which drove the efficiency expert in me crazy. “Why not use the food processor?” I asked the head of the kitchen, “They would be done in 10 minutes!” And he told me the goal wasn’t to get the job done as quickly as possible, it was to offer the students four hours of mindfulness practice in the kitchen.
 
You see, what I failed to do was contemplate the WHY behind his instructions. The food processor would have chopped those carrots in minutes, that's true, but the kitchen manager prioritized a meditative practice over efficiency and expediency (at a Buddhist monastery no less... Go figure!) Why do we always assume we know what's best? I took myself to the meditation hall and sat with my ego until it agreed to play nice.
 
We sure do excel at judging what people do and how they do it, but we fail miserably at trying to understand the WHY behind their actions. When we share a similar goal with someone but their priorities differ from our own, their actions seem backward to us, counter-intuitive, silly, and even “wrong.”
 
Think about it: if you keep getting irritated by someone who refuses to change, it means you also refuse to change, right? Saint Francis of Assisi knew the importance of seeking to understand rather than to be understood. And since we can't wrap our heads around other people's logic by using our own, let's not criticize what we don't even try to understand, because once we get it, there would be nothing left to criticize.
 
Go ahead and contemplate the WHY behind your own actions, and you might find you have that in common with everyone around you.
 
Inner peace is the first step we can take to live in peace with others, so let’s take that step together.

Seed Questions for Reflection

How do you relate to the exhortation of not criticizing what we don't even try to understand? Can you share a personal story of a time you avoided the temptation to criticize and instead tried to understand? What helps you remain committed to understanding the why behind your own actions and those of others?

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17 Past Reflections
KA
Kareem
Jun 26, 2024
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AB
Anjali Bafana
Apr 3, 2023
🙏🙏👌👌 very nice
AM
Feb 8, 2022
My experience of the same has been slightly different, when I took time and understood the other and their actions, I realised that there are many people who are ready to threaten the other to get their own benefits met which are meagre in nature. When i understood this, I knew I had to take an action instead of letting this go on. It took me 2-3 years and loss to understand that humans can do that. And it took me long time to see because acting with half knowledge is way more destructing. Understanding before taking actions does cost you in short term, but will benefit in long run.
CA
Cranberry Apple
Feb 8, 2022
Grrrrrrrrrreat message, gives me an idea.
When my critical self starts criticizing.
To tell it “shhhhhhhhh, let’s contemplate instead”.
LI
Lisa
Feb 8, 2022
The judge in me is always quick to point out a better, faster, or more efficient way of doing most things! Another part of me is the quiet one, who sends me the signal to stop, listen, wait and then respond. I find that I like myself much more when I heed the quiet one rather than the judge, and so do the people around me.
AN
Feb 8, 2022
Not just finger-prints but the pathways to enlightenment are also infinite, but all lead to the same eternal goal !
MR
Feb 8, 2022
Please add my name in the email list.
DD
Feb 4, 2022
I support not criticizing what we don't understand, which means we would criticize very little. When I pay attention, watch, listen, ask questions, am open, and learn, I gain at least some small amount of understanding, which I think is of more value than criticism for everyone involved. I'm not into understanding the why. I don't believe there is a why as in one cause or explanation. I think 'why' is the whole context which can be very big and complex. As Ed Lorenze pointed out, a factor in why a storm happens in New York City is a butterfly flapping its wings in South America. On the biggest level, why something happens is everything that has happened in all of creation. I want to appreciate some of the important factors in the context out of which an action comes. What helps me remain committed to that is my finding it interesting, finding it to be a way to get to know the other, my satisfaction in learning, and the other's satisfaction in being better known.
BA
Barbara Feb 8, 2022
David Doane, thank you for this interesting perspective. I really appreciate your response.
DD
David Doane Feb 8, 2022
Thank you for telling me.
ME
me Feb 11, 2022
This is your gift! Amen
JP
Feb 4, 2022
How to build, sustain, and strengen the bridge of relationships between two people with the same goal but different or opposite approaches? This is a big challenge for sustaining and flourishing interpersonal relationships. It is important to understand not only what but more importantly WHY behind the actions. Empathic understanding of each other is the building block of thriving and peaceful relationships. I love Saint Francis of Assisi's words of wisdom when he shows the importance of seeking to understand rather than to be understood. I love to spend time everyday with my grandson exploring spiritual ways of living life. There are certain ideas of living a spiritual life are basically different from each other. We respectfully differ and listen to each other emapthically and compassionately. This way of relating to each other with an open mind blossoms our relationships. Differences do not create distances between both of us. I deeply value Viktor Frankle's words of wisdom:... View full comment
BA
Barbara Feb 8, 2022
Beautiful post, Jagdish P Dave! I love how you are learning and teaching your grandson at the same time. We should all be learning from each other and teaching at the same time.
ME
me Feb 11, 2022
Amen! I “second” Barbara in this! Beautiful post Jagdish! Especially love you quote from Rumi!
I have a friend I meet “in the field” as often as I am able. I go there because I do not want him to ever “go to the field” to find himself alone, unheard, unloved/unhonored. I will not have it!
Everyone, per my faith and belief, deserves time, attention, love, an ear and “a hug and a kiss” (an embrace of honor and respect!).
Amen.
BA
Barbara Feb 12, 2022
We are all interconnected and if someone is suffering, we suffer as well.
KP
Feb 4, 2022
Seeking to understand is how I've always tried to enter every encounter and it has opened up so many meaningful learning experiences and broadened my perspective. How? Seek to enter conversation asking: What is the Context? How can I see and honor Complexities with Curiousity and Compassion? These encounters happen often, but one particular example came to mind: An encounter with a woman at a restaurant during the Kavanagh hearings for his potential selection on the US Supreme Court. Context. We were both dining alone: she looked sad and seemed curious about me. She asked how was I so comfortable dining alone? We struck up conversation, I asked if she wanted to join me. She did. She shared about her recent divorce. I shared Compassion and transparency about my own divorce. Honored the Complexities. She shifted conversation to Kavanagh, very excited about him being considered. Curiousity/ compassion: I asked what resonated with her about Kavanagh. She shared. I list... View full comment
BA
Barbara Feb 8, 2022
Kristin Pedemonti, I respect this post tremendously and my heart goes out to you in your strength to share. You have truly grown from that experience and are such an inspiration. I am grateful for you sharing and for all these responses posted here, thank you!