Sunday, July 05, 2020

Five Minute Friday: PEOPLE


I'm linking up with Five Minute Friday, writing for five minutes on a given prompt. This week's word is PEOPLE.

The other day Jonathan and I went for a walk at Breakwater Park. It was a beautiful morning, with a strong wind pushing a bank of clouds swiftly across the sky.


As I watched, I was struck by the way the water appeared to be two different colours: gray where the cloud was, blue where the clear sky was. Of course there isn't actually "gray water" and "blue water"; that's an optical illusion. The water isn't any particular colour but just looks blue or gray depending on what's reflected on it. 

Now, anyone who knows Jonathan's love of garbage and recycling might think "And right away this made you think of recycling day, didn't it? Blue box for plastic and metal and glass one week, gray box for paper and cardboard the next..." 

Instead, what came to mind first was people

People can have experiences that seem, on the surface, good or bad, positive or negative. Sometimes it's very clear which category an event or experience falls into, but sometimes the distinction is more illusory. The same event that's bad for one person (heavy rain on the day of their outdoor wedding -- which by the way isn't "ironic" no matter what Alanis Morissette says) can be good for another (their crops and their livelihood are saved by the rainfall). The event that's negative for one person (not getting the job they applied for) is positive for another (the one who does get that job) ... and in fact could even end up being positive for the first person, who ends up getting a different job that suits them even better.

And people themselves can't be easily categorized into good or bad, however much we might like to put them there. Sometimes a person is acting out of what's been reflected on them throughout their lives. What they do, how their lives turn out, is not simply a question of whether they made right or wrong choices.

Life isn't just blue or gray. People aren't just blue or gray.


It's complicated.
 





6 comments:

  1. Excellent reminder for these complicated days! Love your photo, too. Karen :) FMF #29

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    1. Thank you, Karen. It's so nice to have you here today.

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  2. Jeannie, I owe you an apology for being somewhat combative last week. I'm sorry. I can be an idiot. Not 'can be'. AM.

    Recent days have me asking, no, begging, for prayer. Cancer's winning, and I am scared.

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    1. I'm so sorry, Andrew. And as for last week, consider it forgotten. You are in my prayers.

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  3. I can so relate to this Jeannie. When our son was young he spent a lot of time with his granddad watching old John Wayne movies. We began to see that in his little boy mind he was starting to look at the world as black and white, good and bad, nothing in between. Of course in those movies the good guy always wins and the bad guy is punished or killed. We decided to take a break for a while😊 Poor kid had John Wayne withdrawl! Thank goodness he’s grown up with an open mind! Great post and photo!

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    1. Thanks for the comment, Cindy. What a great example! Yes, many of these shows do make a very simplistic distinction between right and wrong, etc.

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