Then, the question of the dirty joke. This is a question of manners. Here, too, it’s probably a good idea to give priority to other people’s views. The manners and mores of a community are a shared possession. When you violate social norms, you are not only being rude to people around you, but you are making it more likely that others will violate the norms in the future. You are tearing the social fabric.
Other People’s Views
David Brooks / International New York Times Opinion | 6 Feb. 2014
Let’s
say you’re turning 40 and you realize you want to leave accounting and
become a hip-hop artist. People will say you’re having a pathetic
midlife crisis, but should you do it anyway?
Let’s
say you’re on the phone in a crowded place and you want to tell your
buddy a dirty joke, which may offend the people around you. Should you
tell it?
Let’s say you have religious or political beliefs that make you unpopular. Should you hide or change them?
Let’s say you are deeply in love with a person your friends dislike. Should you dump that person?
I
ask these questions because I think that we, as a society, are
extremely confused about this issue: When should you care about what
other people think and when should you not?
But,
of course, in reality we do care what other people think. We are wired
to connect, to seek the admiration of others. We want to be part of
communities, which means obeying community norms.
Moreover,
we live at a time of intense social insecurity. The Internet creates
instant feedback, letting you know when people approve of you and when
they don’t. We are also living during an epidemic of conditional love.
Many parents bestow or withdraw affection depending on how well their
children are achieving, producing millions of young people without
secure emotional foundations, who pine for any kind of approval.
I
admit I’m confused myself about when you should pay attention to or
ignore outside opinion. But I’ll throw out four different ways of
thinking about the question, corresponding to the four questions at the
top of this column.
First,
the hip-hop artist question. Here it might be best to defer to public
opinion. People tend to make poor decisions at moments of life
transition, so at these moments, lean in the direction of respecting to
the wisdom of the crowd. Have a midlife crisis, but in less
stereotypical form.
Then,
the question of the dirty joke. This is a question of manners. Here,
too, it’s probably a good idea to give priority to other people’s views.
The manners and mores of a community are a shared possession. When you
violate social norms, you are not only being rude to people around you,
but you are making it more likely that others will violate the norms in
the future. You are tearing the social fabric.
In
most circumstances, therefore, we owe it to our group to usually follow
the rules that help people behave considerately. Put social niceties
above individual desire. Don’t tell the joke.
Then
the question of the unpopular belief. In this case, it is clearly wrong
to sacrifice some of your conviction for immediate popularity.
Basically you are trading in something deep for something shallow.
Most
of our core beliefs originated with some great figure from the distant
past. These ideas, creeds or faiths were then nurtured by generations of
other people, who are also now mostly dead. They created a transcendent
tradition, which we embrace and hope in turn to pass along to
generations as yet unborn. No sensible person would ever be happy
betraying the approval of the admired dead just to win some passing
approval in the here and now.
Finally,
the question of the unpopular fiancé. This is tricky because it depends
on what kind of feedback other people are offering. If they are talking
about your boyfriend’s status (he’s too ugly; he’s got a bad job) then
outside opinion doesn’t matter.
But
they may be observing something about the internal nature of your
relationship that you are too blinded by passion to see. Maybe they can
discern that he hurts you in this way or that. In this case, outside
advice is not about approval; it’s about wisdom at a time when your
emotions are clouding your judgment.
To
sum up, I can’t find any universal rules about when to defer to outside
approval. It depends on the circumstances. It does seem that people
should defer less to public approval as they age. At 15, it’s normal to
be socially insecure. By 45, unless you’re in a crisis, you should have
distilled enough ancient wisdom to have inner criteria.
Plus,
sometimes it’s smart to attract ridicule for its own sake. You’ll learn
that it really does you no harm if you don’t let it. Your friends will
laugh at you. And accept you in the end.
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