If nothing else, call it an interesting alignment of events…
Monday is Martin Luther King Jr. Day, dedicated to the equality of all people, the service of others, and caring for their physical and spiritual needs. It’s “a day on, not a day off.” As his widow, Coretta Scott King once said, “The greatest birthday gift my husband could receive is if people of all racial and ethnic backgrounds celebrated the holiday by performing individual acts of kindness through service to others.”
Monday is also Inauguration Day, where President-elect Donald Trump will be sworn in for his second term as President of the United States. The Swearing-In Ceremony is set to start at noon, with a church service beforehand, luncheon following, and multiple balls to fill out the evening. For the first time in 40 years, the ceremony will be moved inside, due to the freezing cold weather. Note, too, that Presidents Biden, Obama, Bush and Clinton will each be in attendance.
Monday, too, is the College Football Playoff National Championship, the eleventh annual CFP crowning, but first under the 12 team format. It’s Ohio State’s Buckeyes vs. the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame. OSU last won the college football championship in 2014; the Irish haven’t won since 1988. Let me add a brief tangent. When former coach Brian Kelly left Notre Dame 3 years ago, leaving for the likes of LSU, he said, “I want to be in an environment where I have the resources to win a national championship.” Guess our perspectives aren’t always accurate.
(And one more FYI, so that we omit hopefully no one, January 20th also serves as National DJ Day, National Cheese Lovers Day, and Penguin Awareness Day… go penguins, go.)
Each of the above is a “big deal,” so-to speak. What strikes me in their simultaneous occurrence is that we don’t all react the same way to them. In fact, suffice it to say, there is a whole plethora of varied reaction to MLK Day, Inauguration Day, and the CFP.
It’s not even one of those scenarios in which pretty much 80% of us all feel the same way. Not everyone is an admirer of Dr. King; some are still grieving the election of Donald Trump; and much of the country would prefer teams other than the fortunate midwestern two.
So what do we do when such a wide discrepancy of reaction exists?
It’s today’s zillion dollar question. And it just may be one of the biggest pockets of judgment even the intelligent allow. Let me explain…
There are many times a person reacts differently than we. It is thus absolutely, completely valid to say in such a moment, “I don’t understand.” A prudent, growth-mentality response would then seek to understand.
When dismissing the prudence, we pave the way for judgment. Instead of acknowledging a lack of understanding, we leap to judgment. For example…
“There’s no way an educated person could believe that… there’s no way a humble person could cheer for them… absolutely not should she be singing at the inauguration… if she really loved her country…”
Friends, it is completely ok to not understand and to not share the opinion of another. The judgment comes when we assume we know the only right response. Perhaps we don’t articulate it as such, but we often add a value assessment — as in “they aren’t bright, moral, objective, kind, compassionate, Christian, patriotic, you-name it.” We also imply that we are all that and more.
Sorry, but that’s naive.
Often judgment embeds itself within an unknown naïveté.
Let’s be sensitive to what we know and what we don’t… what reactions we share and those we don’t. Some of the January 20th events are easy for some — difficult for others. Some will pay lots of attention; some will pay none.
Note, too, only one day after, January 21st, it’s National Squirrel Appreciation Day. Can’t say I share the reactions of those who are exuberant.
Guess I have more to seek to understand.
Respectfully…
AR