Negation - Labels #3

 

The Good Judgment

The world is full of judgment. Some of it is necessary. It’s important for us to judge risk, for example. When I went bodysurfing on vacation a few weeks back I loved it. I was raised on the beach bodysurfing and I was in my element. But I hadn’t done it in a long time and I took a few waves I shouldn’t have. My judgment wasn’t on target. As a result the waves slammed me into the sand hard enough to scrap my elbow to the bleeding point, much like a really bad rug rash. Later in the week I was much better at my judgment and had nothing but good and safe rides.

The Bad Label

Labeling is a form of judgment. It’s not the judgment of risk. It’s not the judgment even of preference or desire. It’s the judgment of simplistic stereotyping. It’s the judgment of ego and insecurity. The women pictured above have very different bodies.  Someone will label the one on our left as ‘obese’. Not in the medical sense, but in the judgmental sense.  Someone will label the woman on our right as anorexic.  Once again, not for medical reasons, but for judgmental ones. The label is applied not to help the person being labeled, but to satisfy the labeler. The label gives the labeler comfort, it puts them higher up, it gives them moral worth because they aren’t obese or anorexic.  They are better than those two women.

Negation

And when we label like that, we not only judge but we negate. We are blind to who they really are and thus we negate all other elements of their character and humanity.

We negate whether they are kind or loving or sacrificial or patient or brilliant or funny or great parents or fantastic business people or talented artists. We deny ourselves the chance to know who they are because we are so intent on our own moral and social comfort that we would rather just label, judge and be done with it.

How do you avoid doing that in your life?

 

This, and all my drawings, are for sale, original or print. Please email me at marty@napkindad.com to inquire.


 

Drawing and commentary by Marty Coleman

Quote by Soren Kierkegaard, 1813 -1855, Danish Philosopher