"The
French philosopher Émile-Auguste Chartier (know as Alain), was said to
be the finest teacher in France in the first half of the 20th century.
And he developed a formula for calming himself and his pupils down in
the face of irritating people. ‘Never say that people are evil,’ he
wrote, ‘You just need to look for the pin.’ What he meant was: look for
the source of the agony that drives a person to behave in appalling
ways. The calming thought is to imagine that they are suffering
off-stage, in some area we cannot see. To be mature is to learn to
imagine this zone of pain, in spite of the lack of much available
evidence. They may not look as if they were maddened by an inner
psychological ailment: they may look chirpy and full of themselves. But
the ‘pin’ simply must be there – or they would not be causing us harm."
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On Being Unintentionally Hurt
One of the most fundamental paths to calm
is the power to hold on, even in very challenging situations, to a
distinction between what someone does – and what they meant to do.
In law, the difference is enshrined in
the contrasting concepts of murder and manslaughter. The result may be
the same; the body is inert in a pool of blood. But we collectively feel
it makes a huge difference what the perpetrator’s intentions were.
We care about intentions for a very good
reason: because if it was deliberate, then the perpetrator will be an
ongoing and renewable source of danger from whom the community must be
protected. But if it was accidental, then the perpetrator will be
inclined to deep apology and restitution, which renders punishment and
rage far less necessary.
Picture yourself in a restaurant where the
waiter has spilt a glass of wine on your (new) laptop. The damage is
severe and your rage starts to mount. But whether this was an accident
or a willing strategy is key to an appropriate response. A concerted
desire to spill signals that the waiter needs to be confronted head on.
You may have to take radical defensive steps: like shouting at them or
calling for help. But if it was an accident, then the person isn’t your
enemy.
There’s no need to swear at them. In fact, it makes a lot of
sense to be forgiving and kindly, because benevolence will imminently be
heading your way.
Motives are, therefore, crucial. But
unfortunately, we’re seldom very good at perceiving what motives happen
to be involved in the incidents that hurt us. We are easily and wildly
mistaken. We see intention where there was none and escalate and
confront when no strenuous or agitated responses are warranted.
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