Magnifying

A few weeks ago I got in a bit of a kerfuffle with some people on Facebook about a recent public event. I thought it was magnified beyond what it should have been, they disagreed.  It made me start thinking about when it’s good, appropriate and helpful to magnify something and when it can be counterproductive.

I think we live in a world where being offended by something as our first public reaction is the norm. We don’t like what someone says or does and so we react strongly in public to it.  We let everyone know we are offended. There are times when that is important. The offense is real, it is harmful and it is dangerous to you or the world around you.

But there are other times when it can be a very slight offense, one of opinion or outlook or action, that is taken out of context, out of it’s place and blown up into a big offense.  Of course we all have different decision making methods by which we make that choice, but in my mind the rise of social media has blown up the offended first reaction into an crowd sourcing protest intent on inflicting pain, suffering or a moral lesson to someone.  Maybe that feels good but, in my mind, it isn’t always the best tack to take.  Is the goal to feel good or is the goal to get something good to happen?  If it’s to feel good, then shaming someone is like fast food. It feeds you short-term but is it really building your body in any healthy way? If it’s to get something good to happen, shaming someone is very unlikely to be the best way to do that. Maybe talking to them, asking them more questions, getting to the heart of why they said what they said is the best way. Or at least the first step to take.

Maybe there won’t be a resolution you are happy with. You can always take the next step of going public at that point.  But maybe you will have a resolution. Maybe the person who offended you will have a new understanding of what they did and how it affected you.  Maybe they will be sorry and apologize. Maybe they will work to make sure it doesn’t happen again.

I think that’s a good thing.

Marty