Thursday, February 16, 2012

untitled

I know that this class is a diversity intensive course and we are supposed to make ourselves aware of other cultures and minimize our "ignorance" of them, but in a way I believe this hugely flies in the face of culture. I believe culture is largely individual. When we let our external self take over our individual self and the way we identify on the individual level, we come to have a skewed view of who we are. Even though many identify with a culture and the social aspect of this,such as tradition, we cannot let this be mistaken for the crux of culture. This aspect is too heavily focused upon and I think is done when people have not taken the time to look within themselves. This is truly all that matters when we get down to the basics. What is it that I want? What am I? Who am I? What makes me content? These questions will be revealed when you sit and listen to your inner self. Many people are too afraid to do this or have simply never taken the time. Knowing yourself is not a simple thing to do, but one cannot identify with culture on a social level until the individual has been identified, and this will differ for each person. I don't think people would take so much offense at another person misrepresenting "who they are" if people understood themselves better. We are human. We will all be hypocrites, liars, and cheats at some point either by doing so intentionally or not, but we will also be saints. This is the human element. If you know yourself, you are, I believe, more willing to acknowledge this and be  content with yourself and not as wrapped up in another persons thoughts of who you are or as concerned with what it is you do to "correctly" represent your culture to others or with others. This is not to say to never stand up for yourself either. America is a great country because we do stand up for what we believe in, but there is  a line where it is not a good thing to be overly sensitive, culturally aware, or diplomatically correct, especially when this is put before taking care of and knowing ones' self.

This has been brought to my attention throughout reading "Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven." Tradition is continually brought up. Past events are also. One example, "They were all witnesses and nothing more. For hundreds of years, Indians were witnesses to crimes of an epic scale." Sayings such as this come up almost every other line throughout the book. I think this is a great book, but it is important to pay attention to this. Maybe its the feeling I have that as the generations are raised, the ones before them are ingraining these stories into them so that these thoughts are always in their minds. Whenever anything happens that is good, bad, or ordinary a reference is made, blame placed, hopes of future success left buried. Whether good or bad, this makes me worry that the importance of the individual is being lost and the past is becoming too much of a focus, one that will hinder growth, progression, and too much of an unhealthy type of tradition.

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