Tag Archives: honesty

OPEN LETTER TO SHANKAR VEDANTAM

Dear Shankar Vedantam,

I listen to Hidden Brain every week with interest, and frequently I share what I have learned with others. But today I write in some dismay after listening to the segment titled, The Truth about Honesty. Right from the start of the broadcast the idea was promoted that telling Elaine she’s is a bad dancer is “honesty.” That Taya’s youthful disparaging comment to her mother about what her mother wore to go out was “honesty”. But in my book these are judgments and they say much more about the speakers’ own feelings and needs than about Elaine’s dancing or Taya’s mother’s inferior sartorial choices.  

“Elaine is a bad dancer” is not a statement of fact. It is an opinion and a moral judgment disguised as something else. Maybe the people watching Elaine do not enjoy watching her dance, that may be their truth, but to call her a bad dancer is a judgment. Where are the facts? Who is the ultimate judge? Maybe she was feeling something wonderful as she danced (she says as much) and her dancing felt wonderful inside her. I myself loved the simile employed of a giraffe on a dance floor and my mental image was quite positive. All I know is people are very quick to judge others and find them in their view wanting. The notion that others clearly know better than the person they are judging gives these others, all of them, the “authority” to state their opinion as if it is an absolute fact. But the only facts that are real can be stated as objective observations. Elaine kicks her feet while she turns. She extends her arm. All else, like the “dry heaves” description is nothing but judgment, and it tells us only how the speaker feels, in no way truly informing the listener about Elaine’s  dancing.

Many people state opinions as if they are facts. They state judgments good and bad as if they have the moral authority to judge others. But I think giving ourselves the authority to judge everyone else is precisely what causes conflict and suffering in the world. So often, when observing someone else, we tell ourselves how good or bad they are at what they are doing. Or we judge how they look. And we always find others better or more frequently worse than ourselves, constructing a mental hierarchy of worst-worse-bad-good-better-best. But these hierarchies are not facts either. They are opinions, they are judgments. We are all busy judging others and ourselves without reference to “observable facts” at all.

I don’t know what makes a good dancer or a bad dancer. Good and bad are moral judgments and in my view play no role in honesty. Evaluation? It’s an opinion, one that society may choose to value but in the end says nothing about facts. A flamenco dancer may not seem so skillful in tap shoes on a tap board. A self-taught dazzle of a break dancer may feel and look out of place if transported to the stage of Swan Lake. But to call any dancer bad is like saying she or he is an evil dancer, which would strike most people as absurd. 

Honesty means being true to yourself, in honoring and understanding your feelings and knowing the difference between your feelings and your thoughts/judgments/opinions. Sharing your feelings honestly means keeping to statements that do not blame others for how we feel, because we know that we are the sole agents of our feelings. 

The truth about honesty is that honesty is only about ourselves. When we acknowledge either to ourselves and/or to another,  what we are observing, feeling, needing we are being honest. In terms of actions we can be honest about what we have done in the past, what we are thinking/feeling/needing in the moment, or about our intentions for the future. We can be honest about our motivations.  We can be honest about having a judgment of another, but then we declare it as such, and recognize it is not the truth, not a fact, just a judgment. We can’t be honest about anyone else. Speaking my truth to another is about me, and not about them – it is about what I observe, feel and need. Period.

I think the biggest truth about honesty is that most people don’t know what honesty really is. And instead of being honest about themselves, their observations, feelings, and needs, they resort to judgments and verbal brutality. But what purpose does this serve? Cruelty doesn’t help anyone thrive in this world. If you want to be honest, look inward, know yourself. That’s where honesty’s function is, there and only there.

Best wishes,

Phoebe S Wagner

below is a link to the video in question, an episode from Seinfeld.

MORE than just my Review of CREATIVE MARK Squirrel LE Brushes and Set

Originally submitted at Jerry’s Artarama Art Supplies

A limited edition series of CREATIVE MARK  fine blue squirrel hair brushes! For centuries, natural blue squirrel hair has been one of the most cherished hairs for making high quality artists’ paint brushes. This traditional hair is extremely soft and highly absorbent, and offers several advantages over modern…

Horrible, worthless brushes….

By PamWagg Artist from Hartford, CT on 1/6/2013
1out of 5

Pros: Fails To Glide, Rough, Stiff, Fails To Hold A Point

Cons: Poor Quality

Best Uses: Maybe Not Even For Glue, Maybe For Glue

Describe Yourself: Artist

Primary use: Personal

Was this a gift?: No

As an artist I need good brushes for all my work, and I invest in them, so when I saw these, I thought it would be a good thing to try them out. Unfortunately they were definitely nothing like the packaging asserts. Not at all. All I can tell you is that you have to say NOT to every single promise, including believing that these are even made of natural blue squirrel hair. NOT “soft and absorbent, hold lots of color.” NOT “handmade” NOT “round shape with fine point”. The tips are waxed into a pointed shape and you have to literally break off the coating to use them at all, but then you have a brush without any shape whatsoever, never mind a fine point. The brushes are quite literally worse than the cheapest department store brand. DO NOT BUY THEM. You will be wasting your time and anything else you expend on them. Jerry’s sells VERY good brushes, but these are not they.

I rest my case…

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Tags: Unusable, After one use, Picture of Product

proof that these are Creative Mark brushes

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Tags: Picture of Product

I wrote this review at Jerry’s site, but I wanted to add since I did write it, that the packaging pretends that these brushes are, and I quote, “entirely handmade”  — the brush head is “hand-shaped and tied” and yadda yadda yadda.. But how can this be? Do they really expect us to believe that the metal ferrules were individually metal-worked? And the wooden  lacquered handles, that is, painted with shiny paint, were individually painted and for that matter carved by hand? NOT! NOT! NOT! I do not for one second believe any of it and it bugs me that they think that they can get away with it. These brushes were NOT entirely hand-made, that is just plain masculine cow flops! I wouldn’t even give a hoot about the lies, if the brushes were decent but the idea that they could call this set worth  nearly $70 or so, for 6 brushes, and then pretend to drastically mark it down for a once in a lifetime CHristmas sale just burns me. They are and always were crap. And they knew it. They know it now. I don’t get it. Why are people so dishonest. Wouldn’t they rather put out a decent product for a decent price and have some pride in what they make? People would buy it, then, and not complain.

But no, they would rather CHEAT people, once, but a lot of people. Once. Than have a limited number of repeat customers who were loyal to a good and trustworthy manufacturer. Oh, I will get off my soapbox but this sort of thing just disgusts me.