Unveiled Artist
Veteran Member
You totally miss my point. I have a simple analogy. I remember you love analogies, this is a very easy one. No need to think too much
Your grandmother gave you some costly jewels and you walk in the marketplace. Then you see a jewel thief.
Now you tell me it's a smart move that you go to the jewel thief and show him your jewels?
Because if you don't, it is you being too proud about your jewels?
I just use the definition below. Has nothing to do with pride. Also, IF I know someone gets upset with my story THEN I don't tell, as simple as that.
You totally miss my point. I have a simple analogy. I remember you love analogies, this is a very easy one. No need to think too much
Your grandmother gave you some costly jewels and you walk in the marketplace. Then you see a jewel thief.
Now you tell me that you go to the jewel thief and show him your jewels?
Because if you don't, it is you being too proud about your jewels?
I get what you're saying now. I wouldn't. Though, I never saw the other person as a thief. The analogy assumes that strangers and probably even friends are thieves. Which would, of course, put the jewel owner on guard to anyone he doesn't know and/or trust with what he values. I guess healthy pride would work there. (kind of like the example I gave awhile back of the native american who held no copyrights to his words because they were god's)
I guess, actually, that's a good analogy. Though I don't believe in god, the context is our values are not ours to own. We express (give away) our values by our behavior and speech. We live our values rather than hold on to them. I guess humility would be the opposite of that.
If I met a stranger and he wanted to see my jewels, depending on the context of our conversation, I would show it to him. That doesn't mean I'll give him the jewels. It just means as a human being I trust him to where I feel comfortable sharing a bit about myself and what I value. I would personally consider it having too much pride if I did not trust other people with what I have. Theoretically, it shouldn't really matter. Unfortunately, I was raised in a culture that it does matter. It has its benefits and drawbacks.
I guess I'm the opposite. Spiritual experiences I don't mind sharing since they are a part of my identity and should be expressed by my behavior and speech, but external things like what happened in my childhood and other things that helped me through lessons of who I am today, I tell those I trust. Spiritually I'm more open. Some other things I'm not, mostly practicality among other personal and non-personal factors.