On Humanity
Human nature is bigger than the people who experience it . It is indifferent. We view it as setting up expectations that make people nervous. People are stories, they are their stories. Our stories give us meaning. Stories bring us together and break us apart. Human nature is ‘loss’. It is ‘Accomplishment’. It is ‘want’, and undoubtedly it is ‘challenge’.
When I reflect on human nature, I find it to be the unwavering desire to fight for something bigger than yourself, and to win. Human nature is the awareness of living in reality, and knowing its effects are temporary. People, deep down, know how temporary their lives are, yet they strive for dreams that have been handed down by their predecessors; it’s in our nature to do so.
Human nature is, in essence, inner conflict . It is the notion of ‘beating out’ the idea of a being trapped in a ‘system’. It is the nostalgic need to uncover the fact that systems don’t rule us, but our own free will and self-appointed persona do. Human nature is fluid, something we sometimes cannot see or understand but other times fully live and watch. It’s our clockwork.
The way individuals think about themselves in the world very much influences how they feel about themselves. People have thoughts that they are not aware of, which influence their behavior. Human nature encapsulates both rational thinking and irrational thinking. It is a sum of biological factors and social factors, which in turn determines personality. Human nature is the desire to be loved and feel accepted, but the reality of knowing such acceptance is not fully necessary to keep breathing.
Human nature is selfish ambition and selfless sacrifice for the greater good. It is a beautiful paradox. One that merges the spiritual and physical. It’s our ability to determine worth. The ability to step outside of oneself and will the emotions that affect us. It is the lure that makes us ask “what” and “how” rather than knowing “why”. It is our polarization, our never-ending dance between awareness and ignorance.
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We gain perspective and wisdom through loss yet dread each experience. We strive to function fully in our world yet look for safe atmospheres in which to express ourselves. We feel, we empathize, we struggle, and we desire healing.
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My perspective of human nature, in a simple and quickly understandable sentence, is: the psychological and behavioral tendencies in which we live our lives. Yet I also believe it is much more complex than a simple definition. Honestly, I would be lying if I said I truly grasped the idea of what it means to be fully human. I would be skeptical of anyone who claims to present a full and complete answer.
Each living being is a beautiful narrative . We are all walking cultural libraries. Knowing how people perceive events and make judgments about their realities helps to conceptualize individuals more accurately. Understanding their religious myths, legends, and insights about their life grants therapists a deeper look into clients’ past, present, and future behavior, feelings, and thoughts. Stories, themes, patterns, plots, they all help conceptualize the client.
Humanity is paradoxical. A human can kiss his offspring on the forehead and then put a bullet in another forehead later that day. It may not be right or beneficial, but it’s still a reality. The paradox offers complexity, but is simple in its needs.
Love is held above any other intention . Humanity lives and dies for love, the absence of this intention results in hate or indifference. Too much or too little can be deadly. It is pure motivation.
The last concept is that humanity walks around with voids. Everyone develops voids which they long to have filled. A counselor's call is to bring awareness to the voids through guidance, and then facilitate the client in how they can fill the voids in a healthy way.
In my ventures I have discovered that there are thousands of techniques, methods, assessments, and philosophies, but at the end of the day a human is not one to be ‘worked’ with, but rather accompanied.
Geries Shaheen is a Provisionally Licensed Professional Counselor operating in and around St. Louis Missouri. Geries teaches psych classes as an Adjunct at Saint Louis Christian College and offers Adolescent/ Family Therapy through Preferred Family Healthcare . Geries holds his BA in Intercultural Studies from Lincoln Christian University, and his MA in Professional Counseling from Lindenwood University. Holding a certificate in Life Coaching, Geries provides life coaching services to clients online throughout the nation.
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