That's the classic American Thanksgiving dinner test.
It's a little bit of a cop out to cut bait and run when we encounter uncomfortable things. Because if we do that, we stand to never face things like real racism, pandemics, economic hardships, and evil people with weapons. That's the extreme, and I'm not accusing you of being guilty of that -- you probably have lots of people with offensive views who refuse to engage in generative conversations. And for people with extreme viewpoints where there isn't the chance for mutual curiosity and learning, then it's just unhealthy negativism that diminishes your life and mental health. This is why people rightfully should block friends on Facebook who just spew inane stuff without a conversation.
But it's also a missed opportunity not to expose ourselves to different viewpoints and enter conversations with a curiosity to learn, to appreciate a broader perspective of why someone thinks the way they do even if you do not have any intention of agreeing with them. It's what's missing most in society now. It's not bilateral enough, but we can't just mutually stop trying.
I know a lot of people who have had to cut acquaintances and even former friends out of their lives because of political opinions. Sometimes it's sad and necessary. So I have no disrespect for someone who has to draw boundaries about what they do and don't find healthy when inviting it in their lives. It goes without saying I have great respect for how you recognize yourself and your own capacities and natural limits and how you express them. I appreciate the balance you bring between extreme views and how you recognize that even good ideologies taken to their extreme can be dangerous.
It's a little bit of a cop out to cut bait and run when we encounter uncomfortable things. Because if we do that, we stand to never face things like real racism, pandemics, economic hardships, and evil people with weapons. That's the extreme, and I'm not accusing you of being guilty of that -- you probably have lots of people with offensive views who refuse to engage in generative conversations. And for people with extreme viewpoints where there isn't the chance for mutual curiosity and learning, then it's just unhealthy negativism that diminishes your life and mental health. This is why people rightfully should block friends on Facebook who just spew inane stuff without a conversation.
But it's also a missed opportunity not to expose ourselves to different viewpoints and enter conversations with a curiosity to learn, to appreciate a broader perspective of why someone thinks the way they do even if you do not have any intention of agreeing with them. It's what's missing most in society now. It's not bilateral enough, but we can't just mutually stop trying.
I know a lot of people who have had to cut acquaintances and even former friends out of their lives because of political opinions. Sometimes it's sad and necessary. So I have no disrespect for someone who has to draw boundaries about what they do and don't find healthy when inviting it in their lives. It goes without saying I have great respect for how you recognize yourself and your own capacities and natural limits and how you express them. I appreciate the balance you bring between extreme views and how you recognize that even good ideologies taken to their extreme can be dangerous.
In the passenger plane that Iran took down in January following Soleimnani's assassination, nine of my friends and a half dozen acquaintances died. The more sane thing to do would have been to not touch the social media for a while, but I didn't do that, saw the post my cousin had made, blocked him from all my social media (which I felt was long overdue), and made many people upset. I did that for my mental health, 2020 has been tough

