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I'm Just Being Honest

Jo Tyrrell September 17, 2014

“Without knowing the force of words, it is impossible to know more.” ― Confucius

Daily, and in fact, more often than not, minute by minute (if you’re someone who keeps up to speed with the world’s ‘News feed’), it seems that words are telling us what to eat, who to hate, who to judge, who to love, how to love and who we are. Who we want to be and even how to be who we think we should be… it goes on. Before we know it we are drowning in a cacophony of words. Noise, everywhere, inner words, outer words, hidden words, shameful words – they always seem the loudest those last ones…

And sometimes we tiptoe around words. We hide them from ourselves and from others. We share only what we can’t help but share or just the words that we believe help to keep the giant cog we call life and diplomacy turning. Of course there are those delightful creatures that declare, “I’m only being honest”, or “I’m just saying what I feel!” Or how about - you’re hurting people. Please try again.

Our words have so much power it seems crazy that we were ever allowed to get our hands on them. And yet what a joy when the social media world opened up and finally, FINALLY we were able to use our minds and words, even if they were simply to say what WE felt. And boy did we start to say it…

Recently my friend saw a post on a local residential Facebook group by an unwell mother asking for help with some washing as she was alone, and with an equally sick child and no doubt going slowly stir crazy as any intelligent person would assume. I also assume the women in the Great Depression were going equally insane but they didn’t have tweets or Facebook groups. A few well meaning and normal individuals responded – the reason for such a group’s existence - and then it came. Sure as the rain in spring. The feisty, all knowing, Wi-Fi savvy, #hash tag addicted something year olds who decided in their infinite wisdom to make this woman’s life just that little bit worse for the day. Because that’s a good days work done.

So while they sat in their parents comfortable living rooms or coffee shops waiting for their ‘no-foam lattes’ to show up, they expounded all sorts of nonsense about how this woman should be living. Not just a mild grumble because someone just ‘twerked’ away their morning calories. No, this was a vile and hateful onslaught to a woman who asked her local community if they knew someone who could help with some laundry. Justly deserved I hear you cry.

To digress and onto Bill Bryson’s new book for a moment, he spoke about an African American boy in the 1920’s, who on lake Michigan one hot summers day fell asleep on a raft that happened to wash ashore on a whites only beach and was stoned to death for the mishap. The power of thought indeed.

Apparently now more than ever sticks and stones still hurt but words and ideas are the things that kill.

Given the current state of our world, what’s left of it anyway, I find myself looking through the molasses of hate and judgment to find the light. The funny stuff, not the ‘laugh at them’ sort, the “I found yesterdays knickers in my jeans” sort – (yes, I just did this). I look for the wisdom, for the kindness and every so often (thought I hate to admit it) the ones that make you feel vindicated. That tells you that the bad guy doesn’t always win. Because it seems so often they do.

Whether it’s on a long haul flight, or at the supermarket, there are too many times these days when I want to stand up and say, “No. That behavior is not okay. Even if you had a bad day, or if your mother’s on drugs, or your dad wears gloves on his feet, or your roof is a funny shape. If you slept in a rabbit warren till you were five or couldn’t read the labels on the soup tin. It’s still not okay.” Being ‘honest’ is often just your opinion and it’s often wrong. It can also be cruel.

It’s amazing too that when you stand up to those “I’m just being honest crew” how angry they get at the words you use. Sometimes the calm, well thought out, but perhaps uncomfortable to hear words are the hardest to hear. Sometimes I think it comes down to the classic line, “When you have nothing nice to say, say nothing at all”.

So to those of you “just being honest” folk out there. Please stop dirtying up our inane and harmless forums with your ‘truth’ and making another single mothers day hell – she really didn’t need that. Please stop commenting on that beautiful and talented girls eyebrows and that you hate them – I mean, really? Please stop laughing at people being hit in the playground. They will wear that scar forever, long after you’re gone. Please stop spreading bad and inflated news. It’s fiction most of the time – we know this by now surely? Please choose your words more wisely, or even better, if you’re stuck on that one, be quiet, just for a second, Twitter wont mind, nor will we. Please say something kind to someone today, this evening, tomorrow, even if it’s just ‘thank you’.

That’s it. I was just being honest.

Now I feel I should write a joke or something…

x Jo

In Makes you think Tags Mindful Apparel, Little Love Letter Campaign, Jo Tyrrell, I'm just being honest
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love and gratitude heart

Love and Gratitude

Jo Tyrrell September 17, 2014

An interesting point was made recently that the words ‘Love and Gratitude’ were, well, “yawn”. When I first heard this I was more than a little confused. Really? Love and Gratitude? Are they now considered ‘passé’, a little ‘over done’, not quite witty enough or clever enough for some of our more learned friends? Well apparently this is indeed the opinion of some.

After my initial bemusement I started to think about what this actually meant. Love is apparently just another word these days. And Gratitude? Well I’m wondering if perhaps it’s getting a little old fashioned, because now we have awesome words like ‘Funnest’ and even ‘Super Fun’, (thankfully “So hot right now” seems to have made a swift exit). Words are everywhere. But our language is evolving, and now it seems we don’t even need full sentences (LOL).

When words like Gratitude become boring I begin to wonder. Have we over used these words? Hearing “Love you, mean it” as an actual expression you do perhaps get the point.

When did real words become meaningless and meaningless words become real?

I read a beautiful piece in ‘The Four Agreements’ by Don Miguel Ruiz about being “Impeccable with your word’. He says:

“Speak with integrity. Say only what you mean. Avoid using the word to speak against yourself or to gossip about others. Use the power of your word in the direction of truth and love.”

For me it was a mammoth task when I tried it out even for a day. I ended up not saying anything because it seemed easier (yes, that was cheating) and then I promptly flew off the handle a few days later with a mountain of repressed anger. Not quite was I was going for. The point I think is that if we can’t even control what we say most of the time, and if we’re now starting to shorten our thoughts to letters, perhaps it’s time to look at those first words and see what they mean to us – now. And if we find them too simple and unimaginative, then why? I’ve been asking myself that question all day and the answers aren’t so great.

In a world where we are always looking for new maybe we don’t realize that we may have skipped some basic lessons, or at best forgotten them.

For me it’s made me return again to the notion that we have words for a reason. Words do have power, words are things, and when being reminded to be grateful isn’t as witty as we would like, then perhaps we need to stop trying to be so clever and funny and new, and go back to the start and take a lesson in just what the word Gratitude means.

Gratitude

Noun [mass noun] : the quality of being thankful; readiness to show appreciation for and to return kindness.

Now I don’t think that’s so very dull.

x Jo

In Makes you think Tags Jo Tyrrell, Mindful Apparel, Little Love Letter Campaign, Love and Gratitude
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Mindful Apparel

Because words have power

Organic and mindfully sourced eco-friendly apparel reminding us that 'words have power - so make a mindful choice'.