Two Perspectives on Social Filters
Two Perspectives on Social Filters
Dr. Amit Nagpal, New Delhi, India, and
Janet Smith Warfield, J.D., Florida, USA
Releasing Social Filters and Speaking from the Truth of Who
We Are
“Mom, most people function with filters. You don’t.” My
oldest son offered this observation after an emotionally-charged family phone
conference where my youngest son hung up on us, offended by a remark I had
made.
I thought a moment and agreed. “No, I don’t use filters.” I speak
my truth from the core of who I am, right here, right now, in this present
moment, with these people, surrounded by this environment. It is a unique
moment carrying its own energy. I am not willing to mask and distort the energy
of who I am with people I love, even when it hurts. I want intimacy in as many
relationships as possible.
Yet there are times when I do use filters. I use them when
discernment and previous experience have shown me there are people I cannot
trust to care for my welfare as they would care for their own. Then I need to use
filters to protect both them and me.
Can my truth of the moment change? Absolutely and often
quickly when others are also speaking without filters from the core of their
own beings. They offer me a perspective I might not previously have thought of
or additional information I didn’t previously have.
I do know that speaking from my unfiltered core upsets
people who only feel comfortable operating through filters. Is it because I’ve
lived every single one of those filters myself and know them well from the
inside out? Because I’ve lived them, I can penetrate them. That’s threatening
for people who believe their filter is Truth.
My youngest son had commented that there were consequences
to my speech and actions. I know that and don’t take either speech or action
lightly. But are he and his wife aware that there are also consequences to
their speech and actions? Eastern religions call it karma.
So how do we move forward in relationship and collaboration
when one person needs filters and the other is functioning from the core of who
they are? There’s clearly a misalignment of communication and energies. Intimacy
is not possible when people function from filters, although etiquette and
polite conversation certainly are.
“I consider myself a pretty good mediator,” my oldest son
said, “but I don’t know where to go from here.” Neither did I.
“I think I am simply going to stop taking initiative and
seeking out relationships with people who need filters,” I said. “If and when
they want intimacy, I’m here.” I can still love them. I can pray and meditate
for all of us when we’re stuck in our conditioned filters. I can even just keep
my mouth shut when I’m around people stuck in filters. But is it worth the
price?
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Janet Smith Warfield works with wisdom-seekers who want
understanding and clarity so they can live peaceful, powerful, prosperous
lives. Through her unique combination of holistic, creative, right-brain
transformational experiences and 22 years of rigorous, left-brain law practice,
she has learned how to sculpt words in atypical ways to shift her listeners
into experiences beyond words, transforming turmoil into inner peace. For more
information about Janet, go towww.janetsmithwarfield.com; www.wordsculpturespublishing.com;
www.wordsculptures.com.
Copyright © 2011 – Janet Smith Warfield. All rights
reserved.
_____________________________________
Dr. Amit Nagpal’s Perspective
I have suffered a lot in life because I have refused to use
filters. May be I was born brutally honest and ruthlessly frank!
There have been times when I have told a woman right on her face,
“Yes, you are looking fat” (when they asked for my opinion). Well that’s my
opinion, take it or leave it. I don’t claim to be telling truth all the time,
but yes I am telling my version of the truth, what seems true to me.
Inspired by Gandhi, but a bit more complicated, my autobiography
will be entitled, “My Experiments with Complete Truth, Ruthless Frankness and
Brutal Honesty" If I survive for next 20 years I will write a brutally
honest autobiography. I will tell my version of truth, my failures, my successes,
my troubles and my self-inflicted suffering. Life has been such an intense
journey. I don’t care whether people will be interested in reading it, I will
write it to give a vent to whatever emotions have been trapped inside me due to
social filters, and I will write it for myself.
Sometimes I have wondered, “Do people really want to know
the truth? Or do they prefer sweet lies and diplomacy? Have I paid too high a
price for my brutal honesty? Does Indian and eastern cultures like filters and
do not respect straight forwardness? Is there some lack of inner confidence
which makes us look for sweet lies and reject bitter truth? Is life already too
bitter and we should not make it more bitter by truths?”
I still believe we need to develop inner confidence to speak
and hear the truth. In the short term, lies can be sweet. In the long run, truth is always better. But in this fast
paced world, who is bothered about the long run?
Anyways, I will try to be kindly honest now.
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Dr. Amit Nagpal is a Personal Branding Consultant,
passionate Blogger, and Motivational Speaker based in New Delhi, India. He
specializes in personal branding with a holistic touch. His philosophy is “Take
Charge of your Life and your Brand”
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