Who Knows wrote:In all fairness wade, I think sometimes it's hard to recognize when one is being condescending.
I look back to when I first got married, and I realize now, how condescending I was to my wife sometimes. I did things a certain way, and if she did them in a different way, I might have said something like:
"That's great honey, but I like to do it this way, I've found that it works better".
It didn't 'click', till my wife basically told me one day how condescending I was being. After I thought about it, I knew she was right.
Man, I'm almost embarrassed for myself sometimes.
Anyhow, maybe you're just not seeing it, and it's just going to take some of us pointing it out for you to realize it. Just read my quote above, and honestly think to yourself whether your posts come off that way.
Or, maybe you know what you're doing. But regardless, whether you realize it or not, you're likely going to have the opposite effect of what you're trying to achieve.
In all honesty, I don't think so much in condescending terms like: who is better or worse, or who is more worthy or not, or who is more intelligent or wise or not, etc. Rather, I think more in terms of what works and may improve the quality of people's lives (points I have iterated and reiterated on this board many times--not the least of which on this thread). So, I don't think condescension is being suggested or implied by me.
However, I do understand that for some, the "you" statements are more vulnerable to being misinterpreted in that way, and so I have been particularly careful to avoid them, and to use instead the seemingly benign and self-critical/helpful "I" statements instead.
That you would deem even my "I" statements as "condescending", raises question whether there is any way that I or anyone else may say things, by way of disagreement or by way of mentioning methods of improving the human condition, or things and ways that some might think better than others, that you wouldn't find condescending?
It raises questions about whether you have a proper sense of perspective and balance, or perhaps whether certain hypersensitivities or insecurities may be distorting your view--i.e. whether you are judgemental or not.
It raises questions whether you have an unhealthy and dysfunctional aversion to even the most benign and indirect forms of feedback and interaction?
And, it raises question whether you are falsely projecting your own admitted condescension onto me (particularly given your many "you" statements to me).
If the answers to the questions above are "yes", then I am not sure it would matter what I said. With you, I wouldn't be any more successful than were I to actually think condescendingly and speak to you in clearly condescending ways.
But, I am open to being wrong. It is possible that I unknowing think in condescending ways, and even that the benign and self-critical/helpful "I" statements are embued with condescension, though it would take more than your just saying so to convince me.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-