Posts Tagged ‘we are not separate’

there’s no such thing as strangers

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

You can judge someone, think they’re a terrible person, absolutely hate them from what they seem to represent before you even talk to them…

And then talk to them, and realize they’re, just like you, a human being. One deserving of love and peace and joy, just as you are.

And maybe you realize that you and I, well, we aren’t that different after all.

“The idea that other people are strangers only exists in the mind,” says Jesh De Rox (or something to that extent).

Speaking of which (not really, yet at the same time, very really)…

I saw The Tallest Man on Earth live (and met him too!), I met and photographed the awesome Alicia of Instant Vintage, I ate phenomenal vegan food, I befriended and photographed a new friend, I took a train from Los Angeles to San Diego, I wrote on the inside of a bathroom stall.

When I don’t know what to say in words, photographs do it for me.

When I don’t know what to show in photographs, words do it for me.

I’m blessed to have the option. Blessed blessed blessed.

Click to view a bigger version!

This isn’t me, but I still wish it were.

Funny thing about life: life is funny.

(Which also happens to be an awesome adolescent fiction novel that still remains one of my favorite books ever.)

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“maybe, the people who do bad things… maybe they’re just lonely.”

Monday, March 15th, 2010

I woke up yesterday morning, I had to be somewhere in half an hour, and instead of rushing as I would have otherwise, I just stopped. I stopped and sat, and something stirred within my chest and I started to cry.

Because I woke up with this song (from a Shaman King clip) in my head, and the same feelings that I had while writing the very first entry of this journal came back. Once again, upon waking.

Loneliness, loneliness, loneliness.

Loneliness, this deep sadness after the ending of almost every story I love because each of those stories (Cowboy Bebop, Samurai Champloo, Shaman King…) is about lonely people. Lonely people who find each other and maybe eventually leave each other. Lonely people who’ve been alone their whole lives and finally find friends. I love each character, empathize with them, relate to their solitary and lonely life. I feel as if I’m one of them, too– another lonely person who just wants friends, and finds them somehow in this other world. As if every character were truly my friend, the kind of friend and companion I’ve yet to encounter in real life. But at the end of the story, when the unreal world disappears, I’m the one alone. Of course… it’s only a “story”.

Ryu, the character from Shaman King who sings that song, spends his whole life searching for companions, for his “best place”– the place that he belongs. After he meets Yoh, he’s found it. He’s found his best place– through companionship, through friendship.

When I was thirteen I told everyone my biggest fear was being alone. But I was wrong: I’m actually okay with being alone. In fact, I love solitude, relish in it– perhaps even more so than most people. But loneliness is a completely separate being from solitude.

We can all be in the middle of, not just a crowd but people we know, even love and care about, and still feel lonely.

I know I am blessed; I am so thankful. There are amazing people in my life and I know it. And I’ve been fortunate enough to find and be with a great partner, too.

But I still yearn for that sense of companionship. It’s not even that I need it… I’m content with what I have. I really am.

But because of that, I understand lonely people. Because even though I’m not alonenone of us are; we are all interconnected, interdependent– I feel lonely. All the time.

(And I realize I don’t talk much about weakness– especially not my weakness. I try not to show it, to admit it. I’ve been eating out of stress lately and I didn’t even want to admit I was stressed… and still don’t. I don’t feel that stressed. But I do feel … a little tense, a little nervous… I’m aware that I’m using food to comfort and medicate myself, and I’ve made the choice to do so. I still refuse to be unconscious.)

Not everyone understands why I want to love everyone in the world. Truly love each individual being. I might not like them, even. But I want to love them, to wish them happiness, to help them out in times of need. I want to love him and her and you.

In fact, I’ve had the epiphany lately that not many people understand why I would want to love every being on earth at all.

Maybe… the people who do bad things… maybe, they’re just lonely.” Said the ghost of a murdered girl at the end of Tokyo Babylon.

And I believe it. God, do I believe it.

Nobody is bad. Nobody is unworthy of love. “The people who deserve love least… need it the most.” (Heart Warmers)

Think about it.

I truly believe there is no such thing in this world as a “bad person”.

There is no good or bad. In the end: “The only true justice is love.” (Quoth Marco from Shaman King.)

That’s why I love Shaman King so much. It’s a story of a group of loving and naive shamans– who are really just kids– trying to defeat a man who, over the course of a whole millenium, spends three lives (two reincarnated) murdering and trying to exterminate the world of all humans. He hurts and kills so many, robs countless families of their fathers and mothers… yet in the end, it’s only because he is the one lonely and utterly alone, and it was humans who killed the only loved one he had.

Even those who do bad things have their reasons, their broken hearts. Their anger, their sadness. Their loneliness that may have no end to its depths.

Nothing can excuse their actions, but what if.

If we stopped to be more understanding and loving towards those we are quick to label “bad people” instead of creating more hatred… how might our world change?

If we forgave those who did us wrong, and set them and ourselves free from anguish, from the lingering pain of bitterness and resentment… imagine how different our lives would be. How free we would be. If we forgave ourselves.

If we realized that every rude and inconsiderate person we come across might be suffering from something terrible in their lives. If every customer that was impatient and annoying was in a hurry to go to the hospital for their loved one. (I learned this from customer service training at my second job as a hardware store cashier. Thanks, hardware store, for inculcating me with a lifetime start towards customer/client/human satisfaction.)

If we paused and tried to understand people who hurt us instead of reaching for pettiness and revenge.

If we stopped to consider that lashing back at and trying to hurt someone– who might be acting out of pain to begin with– just creates more animosity, hate breeding hate.

Forgiveness heals. Love always heals.

That’s why I try to love, trust, and forgive as many people as my heart can take. I’m human… but I can at least try my best.

I’m not telling you you should, too.

But the world, each individual in it– can always use a little bit more understanding. So turn the other cheek… at least sometimes. Reach out to the bully who’s acting out once in a while.

Behind every horrendous action lies a human who, too, has a heart.

Remember that.

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we trust a lot of strangers.

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

We trust that the mail carrier will bring the mail on time.

We trust that whatever we put in the recycling bin will be recycled, not sold or thrown into a landfill.

We trust that the cashier will charge us for the right amount.

We trust that the pilot will bring us to the right destination.

In short, we trust a lot of strangers– many of whom we may never see again.

So why can’t we trust ourselves?
Why can’t we trust each other?

You tell me.

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we were all strangers once.

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

I look at my body, stripped by myself, with my glasses off. The lines blur together in the mirror.

It doesn’t matter what or who I am, we’re all parts of the same great thing.

We are different but not separate.

Do you know what’s the easiest way to accept or open your mind to or forgive someone you might not have wanted to before?

Talk to them. Reach out to them. Communicate. Or even just smile.

How can you love them or help them, reach out to them, do anything for them, or simply open your mind to their existence if you don’t, can’t even strike up a conversation? Talking with them makes us more able to relate to them, to be able to recognize that they, too, are just like us– humans who wish for and are entitled to happiness just as much as the next person. Let’s make the first step and simply say hi.

Instead of this distance. This vast and cold distance we put between ourselves and others that ultimately leads to even more isolation ignorance and prejudice instead of understanding and acceptance.

We were all strangers once. And then we got to know each other.

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words you can trust

Sunday, February 21st, 2010

day 26

I find the whole notion of not trusting people in general because your trust has been hurt so much in the past to be so sad. It assumes that just because some people are a certain way, all people might be. It’s prejudice on a species scale– some humans may betray your trust, but that doesn’t mean all humans will.

If you stop trusting others because you were hurt once, you lose. You’re the one who misses out on the full spectrum of interesting people out there.

If you refuse to forgive someone, you’re the one left bitter and hurting.

Complete vulnerability is a great strength. Putting yourself out there, opening up, forgiving others, revealing yourself to the world, letting everyone know the real you instead of an artificially constructed image, seeing the goodness in people after being hurt so many times takes courage, but inevitably transforms you into a stronger person.

You can do it, though. You can defy all those people who take the easy way out and simply stop living, because living means experiencing with feelings and feelings means the possibility of pain. But that pain is so beautiful because it’s a part of you too, and every time you survive that pain your heart grows even mightier.

You can do what some people now find impossible– trust other human beings.

I trust you. I believe in you.

And even if you might hurt me, I’ll forgive you, I’ll learn to love you even more, and I’ll trust in your inherent goodness anyway.

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