
One of the most often quoted and pro-offered bits of advice is “walk a mile in their shoes.” Another version of this wisdom is to try and see it from their “point of view.” Jesus said “ “Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye?” — Luke 6: 37-42
I submit that all of these bits of wisdom are more than admirable; they are essential to a life of wisdom and justice. The problem is that all of them are impossible to follow. You can’t walk a mile in another person’s shoes because their shoes won’t fit you. You can’t see it from their point of view because you are not standing where they are. You will always suffer from a plank in your own eye since this is nothing more than cognitive bias which we all suffer from.
Ergo, how do I see the world from another person’s point of view? How do I reconcile the fact that there are often many other points of view? Most of our lives we will live in an ocean of viewpoints. They are like waves washing up on the shore. One after another they roll in, break on the beach, and wash back into the ocean. I couldn’t stop the waves from coming in if I wanted to and I could not stop for a second to deal with all the viewpoints that I am constantly bombarded with.
The internet has made the problem even worse. We are deluged with a tsunami of viewpoints every day. From right, left, central, religious, agnostic, scientific, spiritual, communal, familial and hundreds of other perspectives our viewpoints of the world are bombarded by messages that challenge our thinking and our very reason for being. Whose shoes should I stand in? Whose perspective should I try to take?
Another problem with taking someone’s viewpoint is even more basic and problematic. What if I don’t like or can not even imagine myself in their shoes? I don’t sympathize much with pedophiles, racists, sexists, homophobes, and white supremacists. How do I walk a mile in their shoes? I would have to take a few years of character acting classes to even begin to imagine what a member of the KKK feels and thinks when he/she burns a cross on someone’s front yard.
Finally, the world may not like you for trying to understand the perspectives of the underdogs or those less fortunate in life. You may lose friends and family for challenging viewpoints which are hardened by narrowmindedness and prejudice. I doubt few people want to hear about the perspectives of a rapist or pedophile. Taking their viewpoint will not help you to win friends and influence people.
Those of us who are unwilling to try to see things from another’s point of view will find ourselves in a deep pit of myopia. The effects of not being able to comprehend things from the points of view of others is narrow mindedness, prejudice, and bias. Solutions to problems become more difficult as we narrow our perspectives. If we cannot see the world from the viewpoint of a pedophile (regardless of how abominable they may be), how can we ever understand their problems enough to create solutions that will eliminate this scourge from the earth.
What are some ways that we can actually walk a mile or maybe even just a ½ mile in the shoes of someone else? Here are some recommendations.

Experience It First Hand
This might fall in the category which I dismissed above to “walk a mile etc.” This idea will work for some things. You can experience what a canoeist experiences by going for a canoe ride. You can experience what some writers feel by trying to write a short story. However, if you are White, it will be impossible to feel what a Black person does when he/she is treated badly because of their color. This is true for many other demographics besides race including age, gender, education level and intellectual capabilities.
You will not be able to experience what many people experience either because it is impossible to walk in their shoes or it might even be illegal. For instance, you might not be able to experience the thrill or fear that a bank robber does when she/he walks in a bank to rob it. You will also never be able to experience what somewhat with a mental disability feels as they navigate the world. Thus, while some say that “experience is the best teacher” when it comes to understanding the perspectives of others, experience may not always be the best choice.
However, there are a great many things that we can experience first-hand if we are only willing to try them. I know too many people who will not try things. I am sure we all know people who will not do things even though they have never tried them before. They might have tried them once and decided on the basis of one try that henceforth and forevermore they would never do it again. It takes a certain amount of gumption, open-mindedness, and just plain courage to experience new things. If you are glued to your couch watching the TV or if you are afraid to risk and dare you will find the opportunity of experience a closed door.
A few of the “I won’t try it” items that I hear and that irritate me include:
- I don’t eat fish
- I don’t like to travel
- I don’t like Mexican food
- I don’t like to read
- I don’t like music or concerts
You can add some items that annoy you to hear in my comments section.

Experience It Second Hand
Years ago, I wanted to try to understand sexism, racism, and prejudice. I started out by reading about these subjects from the point of view of authors like James Baldwin, Malcolm X, Susan Brownmiller, Betty Freidan, Anne Frank, Hannah Arendt, Ronald Takaki, Vine Deloria Jr., and many more. I learned a great deal from the stories and experiences told by the people who experience discrimination first hand.
As I got older, I found more and more opportunities to attend lectures and discussions where I heard first hand people like Stokely Carmichael, Angela Davis, H. Rap Brown, Jesse Jackson, Audre Lorde, Rosa Parks, and Sarah Lew Miller. I attended anti-racism seminars sponsored by several different groups. I have watched many documentaries dealing with prejudice and bigotry.
I went to important cultural sites that included Indian museums in Oklahoma, the Holocaust Museum in Israel, the Civil Rights Museum in Birmingham, Jewish Cemeteries in Paris with memorials to each concentration camp and Dachau outside Munich.
My first-hand experiences with people of color grew through my friendships. I went to places that many White people would have put off limits in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, and New York.
Along the way to trying to understand the experiences of other people, I tried to help whenever possible fighting racism or bigotry. I wrote a grievance for some fellow Black soldiers when I was in the service. I supported organizations that fought racism like the Southern Poverty Law Center. I conducted some seminars with a friend dealing with Gay rights. I spoke out whenever I had the opportunity against racism and sexism. My writings deal with many of these issues.
I note the above not to impress you. If anything, I am unimpressed by my progress. Somewhat like they say about Alcoholics, “Once an Alcoholic, always an Alcoholic.” The best you can do is to become a recovering Alcoholic. Growing up a White Christian male in a predominately White Christian Patriarchal society, it is very hard not to be a sexist racist anti-Semite.
When I was a kid, I was told it was a mortal sin to walk into a Jewish Synagogue. That was because “Jews Killed Christ.” There were no Black people in my neighborhood and a woman’s role was in the kitchen. After our Italian family get togethers on Sunday and holidays, the men would all retire to the living room to smoke and watch sports while the women retired to the kitchen to clean the dishes that they had prepared dinner on. Italian men loved boxing and would always root for the White boxer over the Black boxer. No amount of argument would ever convince my Italian relatives that Rocky Marciano was not the greatest boxer of all time. How could he not be? He was White and an Italian. Case closed.
One year at a Martin Luther King memorial service on the University of Minnesota campus at Northrup Auditorium, the keynote speaker was Dave Moore, a well-known news and television personality. Karen and I attended many of the MLK day celebrations over the years. I had never seen a White keynote speaker. I was somewhat surprised and wondered what he could say about Martin Luther King or any other issue dealing with racism. It turned out to be quite an interesting talk.
Dave Moore, spoke on growing up in an all-White Minneapolis neighborhood. He noted that because there were no Black people in his childhood, he assumed when he was older that he could not be a racist. He admitted how wrong he found this assumption to be. He told the audience how many racist attitudes he found that he grew up with from simply assimilating the prejudices of his White culture. It was a very moving talk coming from a man that was so admired by many people. He essentially admitted that he grew up racist without ever knowing a single Black person.
Later in my life, I had a more diverse group of friends. Many of my White friends would say that because they had a Black, Brown, Yellow, Red, or Gay friend that they were not prejudiced. I have found that most colored friends of White people tend to be the “good” guys as opposed to their non-friends who are usually “They and Them people.”
Now we get back to the difficult if not impossible people to understand. How do we put ourselves in the shoes of a rapist or pedophile? There are many that would think I am crazy for asking this question. I believe we will never eliminate these problems if we do not understand the causes. We cannot cure the problem simply by locking up all the pedophiles and rapists in the world. I do not believe that these are inherited characteristics. There have been times and places in the world where practices bordering on rape and pedophilia have actually been legal and condoned.
“Marital rape is criminalized in many countries. Throughout history until the 1970s, most states granted a husband the right to have sex with his wife whenever he so desired, as part of the marriage contract.” — Wikipedia
“Although there is substantial evidence in the historical and anthropological record of the sexual use of children by adults, surprisingly little is known about the etiology of pedophilia or its relation to other forms of sexual aggression.” —
Thankfully, attitudes have changed about many behaviors and while cannibalism may still be a practice in some obscure parts of the world, it has largely been eradicated. Unfortunately, rape and pedophilia although largely recognized as crimes throughout most of the world have not seen a similar level of diminishment.
But if we cannot and would not walk a mile in the shoes of a rapist or pedophile, it still behooves us to understand their motivations. What are the kicks they get out of these anti-social behaviors? Why do they do it? What can we do besides lock them up to effect permanent cures?
The second-best way (through second-hand experiences) would no doubt help us answer some of these questions. The problem is that no one wants to read about what a rapist or pedophile thinks. I remember years ago reading “Soul on Ice” by Eldridge Cleaver and “The Autobiography of Malcolm X.”

“In Soledad state prison, I fell in with a group of young blacks who, like myself, were in vociferous rebellion against what we perceived as a continuation of slavery on a higher plane. We cursed everything American—including baseball and hot dogs. All respect we may have had for politicians, preachers, lawyers, governors, Presidents, congressmen was utterly destroyed as we watched them temporizing and compromising over right and wrong, over legality and illegality, over constitutionality and unconstitutionality. We knew that in the end what they were clashing over was us, what to do with the blacks, and whether or not to start treating us as human beings. I despised all of them.” — Eldridge Cleaver, “Soul on Ice”
Both of these books gave me some insights into the prison experiences of a Black man. Both Malcolm X and Cleaver were once engaged in criminal and violent behavior and both men turned their lives around. Their stories are profound and moving. They also give the world some insights into the pros and cons of a prison experience.
Perhaps more insights provided by rapists and pedophiles might help us to better understand how to deal with these behaviors. I cannot say with any certainty that it would help. The one thing that I am certain of is that nothing we have done in the past seems to be making a difference today. The statistics for child sexual abuse are horrifying.
- There are more than 42 million survivors of sexual abuse in America. (National Association of Adult Survivors of Child Abuse)
- 1 in 3 girls are sexually abused before the age of 18. (The Advocacy Center)
- 1 in 5 boys are sexually abused before the age of 18. (The Advocacy Center)
- 1 in 5 children are solicited sexually while on the Internet before the age of 18. (National Children’s Alliance: Nationwide Child Abuse Statistics)
The statistics for rape and sexual violence in the USA are equally horrifying.
- In 2019, over 652,676 women were raped.
- Over 40% of women in the US have encountered sexual violence.
- Nearly 80% of female sexual assault victims experience their first assault before the age of 25.
- Around 20% of American males have been the victim of sexual violence.
- Rape Statistics show that less than 20% of rapes are reported.
- Women and men with disabilities face twice the risk of sexual assault than able-bodied individuals.
- Sexual violence incidents, preceded by stalking, increased by 1.9% in 2019.
These statistics are from “32 Shocking Sexual Assault Statistics for 2022” by Jennifer Kuadli at Legaljobs.
In Conclusion:
- First-hand experience can help us understand the minds and hearts of others, but we are sometimes limited in the experiences that we can actually undertake.
- Second-hand experiences have pros and cons. Not all Blacks, Asians, Latinos, Indians, women, or any other group that you can think of will have the same experiences. No one on this earth can speak for all people for all time.
- We need to try and try and try again. If the bell really does toll for all people, then we have a responsibility to understand what makes other people happy and what makes them feel miserable.
- We share this planet with other human beings and other species. The more we understand others, the more we can make the world a beautiful peaceful and happy place to live.


Meaning and purpose are Yin and Yang to each other. Purpose is outside you and is what you do in the world. For me purpose involves doing. Meaning is inside you and what you do for yourself. Meaning involves being rather than doing. Let’s use a running race as an example.
Meaning in my dictionary is about living up to my potential, my values and my beliefs by doing the best I can each day to be consistent with them. No one may ever know if I am being kind, compassionate or patient today. You cannot see the inner virtues that I want to live by. I am the only person at the end of each day who can judge whether or not my life had any meaning today. If I can be the best person that I want to be each day, I will die feeling that my life had meaning. To the rest of the world, I may just be another old teacher, old veteran or old guy who lived an average life and died at an average age. Meaning to me is about being and not doing.
If I answer, I want to be rich, my meaning in life will be defined by how I go about becoming rich and what I do with my money. If I want to be a writer, my meaning will be defined by what I write and how I go about the writing process. If I want to be happy, my meaning in life will be defined by how I go about achieving happiness. No one except me can judge how I define myself. People may say that I am not very rich or that I am not a very good writer, but it is what I believe about myself which will define my meaning in life. Vincent Van Gogh is now widely regarded as one of the greatest painters of all time. His paintings sell for millions of dollars. However, in his lifetime, he sold only one painting. It was to his sister-in-law who felt sorry for him.
“What am I in the eyes of most people — a nonentity, an eccentric, or an unpleasant person — somebody who has no position in society and will never have; in short, the lowest of the low. All right, then — even if that were absolutely true, then I should one day like to show by my work what such an eccentric, such a nobody, has in his heart. That is my ambition, based less on resentment than on love in spite of everything, based more on a feeling of serenity than on passion. Though I am often in the depths of misery, there is still calmness, pure harmony and music inside me. I see paintings or drawings in the poorest cottages, in the dirtiest corners. And my mind is driven towards these things with an irresistible momentum.” — 
I conclude with the consideration that Meaning and Purpose may not be everyone’s cup of tea. I confess that it was much later in my life and many hurdles had been taken and many obstacles overcome before I started caring about the meaning and purpose of life. Now I look back and shake my head with some sorrow that I did not grasp their import on life when I was in my teens. A have learned that a life without meaning and purpose is not a life, it is just living.

This theory says that happiness is dependent on other things happening in your life. You must have these other things going on or you will not be happy. If you have a good family, or good job or you have meaningful work, you will be happy. Contingency is like a correlation in statistics. The process of having a good family correlates with happiness but having a good family does not make you happy. Some things have a higher correlation with happiness than other things. Some people believe that having less things is more conducive to happiness than owning a bunch of things.
This could also be called the “Cause and Effect” theory of happiness. This theory says that certain things or activities will lead to the outcome of happiness. For instance, becoming an Olympic Gold Medalist may lead an athlete to happiness.
You will always be happy in proportion to how happy others are around us. If I have a great deal of money but my friends have more, I will be unhappy. However, if I have a bigger office than anybody else in the company, I will be happier than they are. The state of being happy will always be relative or in comparison to some other standard that I mark my happiness by.
This theory views happiness as something that has no limits. The sky is the limit. Extraordinary happiness awaits anyone willing to go for it. Every day will bring more and more happiness if you only believe it is possible.
I have been seeking the truth or what might pass as “truth” for most of my 75 years on this earth. I was considered the “smartest” guy in the room in many of my high school and college classes. The authorities or those that are supposed to be good judges of truth and knowledge gave me two undergraduate degrees, one master’s degree and a Ph.D. Degree. Once upon a time, I belonged to many different professional associations and was also a member of MENSA, the so-called high IQ society. None of my qualifications or associations prepared me any better than anyone else upon this earth to find the TRUTH. Like most of you, I am still looking and hoping that the “Truth will set me free.” If only, I can find it.

“Rathom campaigned for the U.S. to enter World War I in support of the British. Under his management, the Providence Journal produced a series of exposés of German espionage and propaganda in the U.S. In 2004, that same newspaper reported that much of Rathom’s coverage was a fraud: ‘In truth, the Providence Journal had acquired numerous inside scoops on German activities, mostly from British intelligence sources who used Rathom to plant anti-German stories in the American media.’” – 
“The media are among those that profit by marketing fear – nothing gives a boost to circulation and ratings like a good panic – but the media also promote unreasonable fears for subtler and more compelling reasons. The most profound is the simple love of stories and storytelling. For the media, the most essential ingredient of a good story is the same as that of a good movie, play or tale told by a campfire. It has to be about people and emotions, not numbers and reason. Thus, the particularly tragic death of a single child will be reported around the world while a massive and continuing decline in child mortality rates is hardly noticed.” — Pg. 294

















I suppose in one sense, “life is not fair” means that life is indeed following a bell-shaped curve and some of us are on the undesirable end. In other words, some of us are too short, too fat, too unappealing, or any number of other less-desirable traits that we find on the extremes of the bell-shaped curve. Last night I was watching a 3-year-old do stunts on a sized down motorcycle. I could not do these stunts if my life depended on it. This young boy was a natural on the motorcycle. He took to it like a fish to water. We have all seen and perhaps envied some of the more fortunate on our bell-shaped curve who can do things we only dream about doing. For those of us on the wrong end of the bell-shaped curve, life will never seem fair.
I understand why so many people want to believe in heaven and hell. It would be much easier to go on living peacefully if I could really believe that there was someplace better to go to than this earth I now reside on. Too many bad days now seem to intrude on my equanimity. You and I and everyone else that resides on this 3rd rock from the sun are abused and tormented every day with disease, starvation, accidents, environmental devastations, and pandemics. I could handle all of these things but for one thing. It is called “mans’ inhumanity to man.” The stupid cruel things we do to each other over and over again. The wars, murders, and injustices that we inflict on other human beings. And it is not just the average person that inflicts these cruelties, it is the “best” people in the land. In fact, it would seem that the inhumanities done by those with the most money, most intelligence and those we call our leaders are the worst of all the brutalities and savagery that we see in the news each day.

