. . and how we should judge
Published on April 18, 2008 By ZubaZ In Personal Relationships

[Origianlly posted April 4th, 2005]

I was talking last week with some friends about intimacy; how we as a group get together weekly and have been for years and there is still a hesitation to open up and be intimate with the group.

I think that the biggest deterrent that came up was a fear of being judged.

As usual, I have mixed feelings about this.

I think that as responsible people we have an obligation to judge. I think that a fear of being judged poorly is a control in our society. I further think that judging within a group will improve (more on this in a second) one's powers of judgment.

The hard part about judging is finding balance. I tell my kids that they should assume people are good. But I also tell them that if there a person who looks wrong walking toward you, move away from them. There's a thin line between reasonable pre-judging based on experience and wisdom and prejudice based on fear and stereotype.

I think there are things that we all want to do or have wanted to do in the past that society as a whole may not have approved of. Maybe things that aren't illegal but just not right. What defines "not just right"? Other people. Other people judging you. It's a good thing.

The function of group judgment should be wicked strong (as they might say in the Boston of my imagination). The trick there is the group that's doing the judgment. If the judging group is not a sampling of the greater whole; instead, is a group that might reinforce the behavior being judged; all benefits of judgment is lost. If the fear of being judged harshly is stopping a person from revealing a behavior, perhaps they need to evaluate stopping that behavior.

Group judgment does not have to be negative though. Positive reinforcement is likely and should be encouraged. The above points are just as valid (with the alteration of the anticipation of being judged positively in place of fear of poor judgment).

In regards to intimacy, the evening made me recall a . . . . Poem (?) from my youth that has stuck with me over the years.

It was written by Piers Anthony to a teenager who was in desperate need of love. He wrote about her in the author's note of Wielding Red Sword. I extracted the poem here:

  • Chapter One: Once upon a time, there was a little unicorn. She lived in a shell.
  • Chapter Two: There was a funny thing about this shell. No one else could see it.
  • Chapter Three: But to her, it was very heavy, as if an elephant were on it.
  • Chapter Four: Sometimes that shell just seemed to crush all the happiness right out of her.
  • Chapter Five: Of course, she wasn't really a unicorn, because little unicorns don't' live in shells.
  • Chapter Six: She was really an alicorn, which is a flying unicorn. Her mane was brown.
  • Chapter Seven: Alicorns live in shells, because they like privacy. When anyone comes near, they close.
  • Chapter Eight: Of course that means that hardly anyone ever sees an alicorn, which is unfortunate.
  • Chapter Nine: Because alicorns are really very specials creatures, when they come out of their shells.
  • Chapter Ten: But the little unicorn didn't know she was an alicorn. She wanted to die.
  • Chapter Eleven: This is because a magical creature who stifles her magic is in deep trouble.
  • Chapter Twelve: No one else understood about this, because no one else could see the shell.
  • Chapter Thirteen: Except for maybe on old centaur; but he was too far away to help.
  • Chapter Fourteen: He hoped the little unicorn would learned to fly, before she learned to die.

For me, intimacy with people outside of family never seemed to be necessary. It never paid to get too close to anyone because either they would move or you would move. I was never that close to my extended family; didn't have any close cousins to confide in. Even within my own family I don't recall being very intimate. It's just the way I'm wired I guess.

I try though. I see the value in it. And I'm getting better all the time. Practice, practice, practice.


Comments
on Apr 19, 2008

You're right, group judgement should not be negative but sometimes it is.  It should be constructive and it's good when that is so.  It's hard being intimate with others at times.  (not the sexual connotations as you know)  Some people dislike being intimate with others, i.e., sharing their feelings or their thoughts.  Some people feel that being vulnerable to others will or can be used against them, so they don't do it.  In some case, this is right.  But I guess we all take a chance when we open up to others who are not family or close friends right?  Then again, unless that person is a close friend or acquaintance we are taking a big step in intimacy!  Heh, that's what we do in blogging everyday isn't it?! 

Good luck!

on Apr 19, 2008

For me, intimacy with people outside of family never seemed to be necessary.
I was talking last week with some friends about intimacy;

Perhaps I have a different meaning of the word "intimacy" ,  "intimate"  than you are using here.

When I say the only person I'm intimate with is my husband....do you know where I'm coming from?

on Apr 19, 2008

Perhaps I have a different meaning of the word "intimacy" , "intimate" than you are using here. When I say the only person I'm intimate with is my husband....do you know where I'm coming from?

 

Definitions of intimate on the Web:

  • marked by close acquaintance, association, or familiarity; "intimate friend"; "intimate relations between economics, politics, and legal ...
  • cozy: having or fostering a warm or friendly and informal atmosphere; "had a cozy chat"; "a relaxed informal manner"; "an intimate cocktail lounge"; "the small room was cozy and intimate"
  • familiar: having mutual interests or affections; of established friendship; "on familiar terms"; "pretending she is on an intimate footing with those she slanders"
  • involved in a sexual relationship; "the intimate (or sexual) relations between husband and wife"; "she had been intimate with many men"
  • give to understand; "I insinuated that I did not like his wife"
  • inner: innermost or essential; "the inner logic of Cubism"; "the internal contradictions of the theory"; "the intimate structure of matter"
  • suggest: imply as a possibility; "The evidence suggests a need for more clarification"
  • confidant: someone to whom private matters are confided
  • thoroughly acquainted through study or experience; "this girl, so intimate with nature"-W.H.Hudson; "knowledgeable about the technique of painting"- Herbert Read

  • Not the sexula one. 

    on Apr 20, 2008
    Ya, I see this, however, I can say positively that I'm not intimate with any of my friends, neighbors or otherwise.   Call me old-fashioned, but it's just the way it is.

    on Apr 21, 2008

    Ya, I see this, however, I can say positively that I'm not intimate with any of my friends, neighbors or otherwise. Call me old-fashioned, but it's just the way it is.

     

    I think it's more old fashioned to BE intimate; to have friends or family that you can trust with who you are and what you think.  I think that people are more insular these days; more private.  That's really too bad I think.

     

    Of course, here at JoeUser, folks are all over the place.