We Can’t See Each Other
Sun September 20th 2009

Technology Everywhere
There is a saying that “Your companions are your mirrors and show you yourself.” There are pretty deep and intricate explanations for why this may be (for instance, one by Deepak Chopra) but I believe that truth can be found in this statement on a fairly simple level as well.
If you think about it, when we interact with another person, even in a very superficial way, we can use their reactions to us as clues as to how we come across to other people. Just as our opinions of ourselves are not completely accurate (know anyone who over-magnifies their own flaws or overstates their own virtues?), others’ beliefs about us are also likely biased in some way of which we are not aware. So it’s important to avoid taking any one opinion as the truth, and instead look at them as a whole to see what kind of picture they paint of us.
If it were simple enough for me to advise that we try to do better at recognizing how people react to us, I would just do that. However, there are some major obstacles that makes that a very difficult accomplishment in today’s world:
First of all, I have become aware that we have turned into a society where “I don’t care what anyone thinks of me.” is a popular attitude. I think it’s is a potentially dangerous one. I do believe that no one has a right to put us down for our personal beliefs or lifestyles. However, I believe that when we start behaving without any regard for what people around us may think, we run the risk of disrespecting those around us by ignoring their beliefs as well as becoming stuck with only our own distorted images of ourselves.
Another big problem is that, in order to pay attention to how other people react to us, it would first require us to actually interact with each other. If you’ve been in any kind of public space lately (like walking down a city street or on any form of public transportation), you have surely noticed the overwhelming abundance of people fiddling with their “smart” phones or listening to their mp3 players with headphones. These devices have provided us with an excuse to avoid so much as looking at other people, let alone speaking or interacting with them. I’ve held doors open for people who were so engrossed in their phones that they didn’t even notice or acknowledge my presence. Eye contact has somehow become taboo and by saying hello to a stranger, we are likely to elicit some kind of “What do you want?” reaction.
Even with the “smart” phones, we are beginning to actually speak to each other less and less. It has become so common for e-mail or text messaging to be the preferred methods of phone communication over actually having a voice conversation – even if talking directly to one another would be quicker and easier! I actually received a text message recently asking “How are property taxes determined?”, as if I could’ve given any real explanation to that in 160 characters or less!
We don’t have to interact with bank tellers anymore because we can manage our money online. We can buy groceries without talking to another human being because we can use the self-checkout machines. Just about everything, these days, can be handled without human contact and it’s causing us to lose all of our social skills. We are beginning to forget how to have normal face-to-face conversations with each other. We are beginning to not even see each other even if we’re standing right next to one other.
So, we can’t see ourselves because we can’t see each other. It’s a pretty scary thing and I think that we, as a society, are in trouble especially if we continue along this path. We need to try and think of ways to reverse this, otherwise there may be no coming back…

As you can see, it’s been a while since I last posted. I’ve missed blogging too, because I really do love to write and the subject matter of this Cloudy Mirror Blog is always on my mind. The excuse that I’ve been making for myself is that I just haven’t had time to do it. Then one day, while doing some tedious and not-really-necessary-task, I realized that I’ve been spending a lot of my time doing things that I really don’t enjoy. Why is that? Do I really have my priorities straight?
Congratulations, Rafael Nadal! Yes, of course I mean for winning Wimbledon in simply the most incredible tennis match that I’ve ever seen, but more so for keeping your head on straight and for being such a classy individual. For that, congratulations and a million thanks.
Many of us are uncomfortable with uncertainty. We don’t like not knowing what’s going to happen next in our lives and so we spend a lot of time and energy trying to control everything that happens in our day-to-day activities. Those of us who act like this are commonly referred to as “control freaks”. It’s not the healthiest way to behave, but I think that we do it, at least in part, because we’re not comfortable with trying to figure things out “on-the-fly” and risking failure. It can be pretty exhausting, and is this kind of behavior really helping us anyway?
Ah HA! I’m not crazy! I have it right here in writing! Maria Shriver told me so, so it must be true! Well… ok fine. So maybe it doesn’t necessarily make me sane, but I just read her most recent book “Just Who Will You Be?” and I was absolutely thrilled to find that some of the things that she writes about are exactly what has been running through my head lately!


