Have you ever been judged? Have you ever been made to feel "odd" or 
"different"? We all have unique personality traits which go against the 
norm. Because of these differences, we are sometimes judged and made to 
feel odd or that there is something wrong with us. Because we live by 
set of rules and expectations, we in turn judge others by our standards.
 Our invitation in life is to be authentic and to operate under values 
that are true for us and allow others to do the same. This genuineness 
might make us unpopular and misunderstood but it will liberate us to be 
the person we were created to be. In order to be authentic, we need to 
understand and accept our distinctive personality style and feelings. We
 need to have the courage to believe that it is "OK to Be Different".
As
 children, we have learned to survive by being conventional; most of us 
gave up our right to be who we are in order to accommodate those around 
us. We ceased to be authentic because of a desire to please those we 
love and the comfort in the familiar. Being a conformist certainly made 
it easier for our teachers and parents but was it easier for us? By 
minimizing or dismissing our preference, we pretend that our inclination
 is "no big deal" but conforming and denial of our true self comes at a 
cost. The cost is that we step back from what is true for us and we use a
 great deal of energy to maintain the pretense that everything is fine. 
We disassociate from our feelings and hinder access to the Divine.
Through
 my training, I have discovered that some of our idiosyncrasies have 
more to do with our innate personality, upbringing and culture than 
obstinacy. For example, my Meyers Briggs Personality Style TM is often 
judged "cheap" by others. My personality type values conservation, 
minimalism and thriftiness and avoids frills and extravagance. As a 
result, there will always be "enough" food for a gathering, but it will 
be a moderate presentation, as opposed to overload. The preference is to
 choose modest and practical over lavish and abundance, especially when 
it comes to oneself. This moderation is then judged by others as "stingy
 or cheap".
In reality, my personality type is generous but the 
gift of giving is done privately and without fanfare. Not only do I come
 to my approach in life innately; I also come from it culturally. I was 
raised by a humble father, who grew up in the depression and taught us 
to utilize everything and never waste. His philosophy is perfectly in 
tuned with my Myers Briggs personality because it honors the 
conservation of resources. As you can see, my "cheapness" is part of the
 fabric of my being, in the same way that the person who judges me may 
be extravagant and lavish due to his personality type or family 
background. The challenge in life is to suspend judgment. When we begin 
to accept that it is "OK, to Be Different", we can accept people as they
 are and learn from their different type of behavior.
We are all 
human and because of this condition, we are imperfect and at times we 
disappoint others. If our intentions are pure (and we know if they are 
or not), we need to ignore judgment and criticism and accept ourselves. 
The clincher here is that we also need to do the same for others; to 
accept their difference and allow them idiosyncrasies. The one exception
 being that we are entitled to step back and disengage from people who 
misuse or abuse us. For the most part, people are benevolent, lack 
malice and are doing the best that they can. We need to become conscious
 when we judge others' peculiarities and differences. This can include 
physical appearance, such as tattoos, unusual mannerism or behavior. 
Years ago, my husband and I were in a supermarket checkout line. The 
woman in front of us was poorly dressed, wearing a thin cotton dress 
with bare legs and sneakers despite the fact it was snowing out. She had
 3 food orders that she was paying for with food stamps. The 
transactions were taking a long time and the people behind us were 
quietly grumbling. When she came to the last order, everything stopped 
when she realized that she did not have enough money. You could have 
heard a pin drop as the cashier paged the manager. We quietly handed the
 cashier the amount that was needed. She thanked us with a toothless 
grin and explained that the food was for her 2 foster children. The 
judgments that we make! Here was this poorly dressed woman using food 
stamps in order to feed 2 foster children. How many of us would take in 
foster children?
 
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