What are judgments?
- Describing things as good or
bad, valuable or worthless, smart or stupid, terrible or wonderful,
beautiful or ugly, etc.
- Describing how things “should”
or “shouldn’t” be
- Describing by comparing or
contrasting
Usefulness of judgments?
- They allow for quick
descriptions by creating simple categories
- They are fast, short hand for
describing preferences and consequences
Problems with judgments?
- They often distract from
reality (judgments may replace facts; when we judge we often stop
observing)
- They tend to feed negative
emotions (anger, guilt, shame)
- Positive judgments are fragile:
anything judged “good” can also be judged “bad”
Steps for letting go of judgments
- Practice noticing judgments.
Keep a count of judgments.
- Ask yourself, “Do I want to be
judging?” “Is the judging helping or hurting me?”
- Replace judgments with:
1.
Statements of
preference: “I like…” “I prefer…” or “I wish…”
2.
Statements of
consequences: “This is helpful/harmful for…”, “This is effective/ineffective
for…”
3.
Statements of fact:
“This thing happened in this way, at this time…”
- Practice accepting what is
(facts, preferences, consequences) and letting go of the judgments. Let
the judgments drift away.
- Remember not to judge your
judging!
No comments:
Post a Comment