Also, a note...right before class, I had been chatting with someone I had some classes with a few years back and have kept in touch with on Facebook. After same sex marriage was legalized nationwide recently, I responded to a post of hers on Facebook about how she feels that no matter what, either gays or Christians will face discrimination. I also said that I normally wouldn't comment on something like that on Facebook, but that her stance has me baffled since she's one of the sweetest people I know. To this, she suggested that we get together over coffee to talk, and we agreed to meet on campus before my class would start. Our conversation, and the curiosity on both sides of it, was fresh in my mind when the professor gave us our first subject to write on.
... ... ...
Current
social problem or concern: Considering the conversation that I just came from,
the subject of willingness to listen to other people comes to mind. I was just
talking to someone about her Christian beliefs versus queer rights, and how
both can live alongside each other. She talked about “compromise,” but I don’t
see how “compromise” is needed since I don’t see how her own rights are being
infringed. Maybe I need to learn to listen better? But maybe she just means
that she wishes she could express her own feelings without people coming down
hard on her for them. Both of us walked away from the conversation being glad
that we could just talk, and she was asking me about my Pagan beliefs. So,
problems: 1) That some feel queer rights and Christian freedoms don’t coexist
well. Is there a solution that makes everyone happy without anyone feeling like
they’re compromised? 2) Willingness to listen
to others when you disagree with them, this doesn’t happen enough. The second
seems to be a human nature problem, and is a conversation well worth having
throughout all human history. The first is a problem particular to here and
now, at this time in history and in this place, though others have had this
conversation (and others will again) in other countries.
Writer I
admire, type of literature/genre I’m drawn to: Jim Butcher, Tamora Pierce,
Ursula K. Le Guin. Writing that gets into what makes us tick, is very serious
in that way, but manages to also have a sense of humor about it. I love
fantasy/science fiction in particular, but I think in other genres I
particularly love the books that fit the above description.
Greatest
fear, one of them: Being alone, with no one to help me. This may be what drives
my agoraphobia, since it frightens me that anxiety might take hold of me when
I’m out and about, feeling dizzy and feeling distant from the world, but not
have anyone to hold on to to anchor myself, someone who is my “lifeboat” or my
safety net, I suppose.
1 comment:
Interesting.
While listening seems so easy, agreeing to disagree seems so unattainable.
Post a Comment