4.4 • 920 Ratings
🗓️ 23 February 2024
⏱️ 15 minutes
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Seeing Others As Crippled, Not Evil
The phrase "seeing others as crippled, not evil" suggests a fundamental shift in how we perceive people often stigmatized, misunderstood, or labeled as bad. Here's a breakdown of what this perspective might entail:
1. Challenging Assumptions about Evil
2. Crippled vs. Disabled
3. Focusing on Humanity
4. Compassion and Opportunity
Important Considerations:
Overall, "seeing others as crippled, not evil" encourages a move away from stigmatization and encourages greater empathy, focus on potential, and the possibility of redemption based on a better understanding of the situations surrounding others.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the happiness podcast. I'm Dr. Robert Puff. Do you have anyone in your life that you feel is evil that really has hurt you in ways that are just unconscionable, in ways that make you want to cry or go into a rage, |
0:28.0 | because it's so painful, so despicable, what they did to you or perhaps someone that you love, I think we all |
0:37.0 | know people that we would put in the category of evil. |
0:41.0 | And I think we use the word evil. We label others as evil when we just can't understand |
0:49.6 | how one human being could do something to another human being in such horrifically painful, awful ways. |
0:58.0 | I've been in practice as a clinical psychologist now for over 30 years and I can tell you I've heard a lot of |
1:06.2 | stories about people that I think many of us would label as evil. My clients aren't evil, but the people they've encountered in life, they |
1:17.1 | feel they are evil. I work in private practice, so that means people come to me out of choice. They are choosing |
1:24.4 | to come to me because they want it to help. But when I was being trained I worked |
1:29.3 | for two years at the VA hospital in Sepulveda, California. And the men and women in that treatment |
1:36.1 | program really needed help because their lives were just so challenging. So they weren't necessarily |
1:42.0 | wanting to go to counseling but part of their treatment |
1:44.4 | they needed to speak with someone like me. So in many ways instead of hearing |
1:49.4 | about the people that were evil I was actually working with the people that many of us, again, would call |
1:56.2 | evil. They had done crimes against others that we can't even imagine that are just truly despicable. |
2:05.0 | But I learned something. |
2:07.0 | I learned something many years ago that was a very important lesson for me |
2:11.0 | that I'm hoping I can share with you today and that was |
2:15.3 | these people were not evil they were crippled when we see people as |
2:22.2 | crippled instead of as evil, there's a fundamental shift that occurs, |
2:27.0 | because evil is a weighty term often used to dehumanize people, especially those people whose actions differ from |
2:36.2 | accepted social norms. When we see others as crippled, instead of as evil, we re-centered the conversation of experiences and challenge they face instead of just |
... |
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