Some of you are familiar with Canadian singer-songwriter Gordon Lightfoot’s 1971 song, “If You Could Read My Mind.” It’s a great song.
The song was inspired by the divorce that ended Lightfoot’s first marriage. In the recorded version of the song, Lightfoot sings,
If you could read my mind, love,
what a tale my thoughts could tell.
Just like an old time movie,
'bout a ghost from a wishing well.
In a castle dark or a fortress strong.
with chains upon my feet.
But stories always end,
and if you read between the lines,
you'd know that I'm just tryin' to understand
the feelings that you lack.
Lightfoot and his first wife, Brita Ingegerd Olaisson, had two children, Fred and Ingrid. At their daughter Ingrid’s request, Lightfoot started singing an altered version of the last line. Now he sings, “I’m just trying to understand the feelings that we lack.” As his daughter pointed out to him, divorce is seldom only one partner’s fault.
Lightfoot changed the lyric out of consideration for his daughter’s feelings. Perhaps he took his ex-wife’s feelings into account as well, albeit belatedly.
Some folks will take Lightfoot’s lyrical adjustment as a sign of weakness. They’ll ask, “Why should he care what anybody else thinks?” Some folks will also take his daughter Ingrid’s request that he change the lyric as a sign of weakness. They may call her a snowflake or something similar.
I think that, while it is right and necessary that we speak the truth, it is good to do so with as much consideration for others’ feelings as possible. It’s always good to think about how our words will affect other people.
I recognize that sometimes that’s difficult. For example, I don’t know how to be considerate of someone’s racist, sexist, or otherwise hateful and prejudiced attitudes, words, and actions. Besides, any consideration I might try to have for them disappears in light of the consideration I must have for those who get hurt by the attitudes, words, and actions of people who practice and promote racism and sexism.
I guess we have to leave the hateful people aside, except for praying for them and trying to offer a positive witness to them. They’re not going to contribute to any solutions, anyway.
Most of us are in this together, though. Being considerate of each other’s feelings is just basic kindness, which we can never have enough of. Even if telling the truth means that I must disagree with or challenge your perspective or position, I don’t have to try to harm you.
But it’s hard to speak the truth in a loving way. That’s true for several reasons.
For one thing, it can be hard to know the truth. The truth we know is the product of our experience. We need to try to understand why we think we know what we think we know. We need to try hard to be as informed as we can be about the facts of a matter.
For another thing, even when we’re convinced, after we try to filter out our unfounded assumptions, inherited biases, faulty conclusions, and emotional reactions, that we know the truth, it can be hard to say it. This is especially true if the truth we need to say is contentious or controversial. We might be afraid that our speaking will make things worse. Or, we might be too considerate of others’ feelings—yes, I think that’s possible—with the result that we won’t risk saying anything that might offend someone, even if it needs to be said.
For a third thing, it can be hard to speak the truth in a way that takes other people seriously—that treats them as equal partners in the human enterprise. The key to being considerate in expressing our viewpoints is to recognize that everyone is a fellow human being and to treat each other with the respect that our awareness of our common identity should produce.
It is unfortunate that we often can’t have civil and constructive discussions about the issues that really matter because our default settings are (1) to take things personally and (2) to attack others personally.
It’s interesting how out of the same mind, mouth, and social media account can come these two statements (or approximations of them): (1) “I’m going to say what I think and I don’t care how it affects anyone” and (2) “How dare you say that!” Too often we don’t want to give others the same respect and consideration we expect.
I believe that one way out of our unfortunate situation is to learn what Gordon Lightfoot learned that led him to change his song lyric: it’s not about you and it’s not about me—it’s about us.
Being considerate is about being kind, and we can always use more kindness.
You may not think that we need to be kind and considerate as we deal with the challenging issues and situations confronting us.
If you don’t, I’ll try not to take it personally.
The place where Michael Ruffin asks questions, raises issues, makes observations and seeks help in trying to figure it all out so that together we can maybe, just maybe, do something about it.
Thursday, June 27, 2019
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
Mike the Poet
In late spring of 1964, I joined my fellow graduates of Miss Sylvia’s Kindergarten on the stage of the Gordon Grammar School lunchroom in Barnesville, Georgia.
At a designated point in the midst of all the pomp and circumstance, I stepped forward and, with trembling knees and shaking voice, recited the first poem I ever uttered publicly. It was “The Swing” by Robert Louis Stevenson.
How
do you like to go up in a swing,
Up in the air so blue?
Oh,
I do think it the pleasantest thing
Ever a child can do!
Stevenson was a pretty good writer. Thinking I could do
better, I eventually wrote some poems of my own. It was when I was a student in
Mrs. Key’s creative writing class at Forsyth Road School. The one I remember
was about space. It was a moving piece with great depth and insight. The
closing line was,
The
biggest space I know of
is
the space between your ears.
I don’t know
which of my classmates I had in mind. If you think it was you, let me know and
I’ll apologize.
I wrote a
few poems over the next half-century, but I’ve only recently begun writing
poetry in a disciplined way. I try to write one every week. Some of them are
about my life, while others are about my perspective on the world and related
matters.
I thought
I’d share two of them to let you know where my thoughts have been lately. The
fact that they don’t rhyme tells you how deep and serious they are.
The first
one is called “Uneven Spaces.” I think it’s about how I want to live.
The
sign in the passageway
between
the terminal and the plane
said,
“Caution: Uneven Spaces.”
It
meant, I think, that the junctures
between
the passageway’s sections
created
a tripping hazard.
It
set me to thinking about how
we
always need to watch our step
because
life isn’t level or uniform.
Some
parts are high, some low.
Some
are wide, some narrow.
Some
are predictable, some surprising.
A
problem: if you spend all your time
looking
down for the uneven spaces,
you’ll
miss seeing lots of amazing things.
Some
things are worth the risk
of
falling flat on your face.
The second
one is called “Hardening.” I think it’s about how I want to grow old.
Three
score and ten seems fair.
But
if you feel pretty good as you get near it,
four
score starts to sound reasonable,
four
score and ten attainable, and
five
score not out of the question.
Then
you think about how
your
minor arthritis might become major,
your
occasional forgetfulness might become frequent,
and
your declining hearing might go all the way down,
and
you tell yourself well, none of that would be so bad.
Minor
inconveniences requiring bearable adjustments.
But
what if you become
more
set in your ways,
more
stuck in your perspectives,
more
callous in your sympathies,
less
open in your search for truth?
And
you find yourself realizing
you’d
rather go sooner with hardened arteries
than
later with hardened attitudes.
You may not
write poetry. But I hope you take time to think deeply about your life in the
world.
We only get to do it once, and we need to find as much meaning in it as we can.
We only get to do it once, and we need to find as much meaning in it as we can.
To read my weekly poems,
follow me on Instagram at michaell.ruffin.