Sunday, November 18, 2012
Walking In My Shoes
One of my favorite songs and the one really change my thoughts.
Walking in my shoes. Depeche Mode 1993.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHuf0gmq-A4
In few words this song talks about empathy
Have you ever thought how you can do so many tasks, study many topics, and take a couple of jobs alla at the same time?
Then someone tells you how exhausted he or she is just by doing one of the multiple things you do. Immediately you thing. Why this person is complaint for one thing while I can do 5?
Well….Try to walk in his or her shoes to see if you can understand how that person is felling about. We don’t know what that person has been through. We don’t know the person background and for sure that person can do some things or has some skills that we don’t.
I used to be the kind of person that used to measure people according to my own standards, my own believes and my own experience. How wrong I was.
This song helped me to realize that all human beings are different and all have a different process and times to learn the same things. Some of them learn to read at the edge of 4, others at 5. Since I learned to read at 5 years old it does not mean that all people learned at the same edge. Most important those who could not learn, are not wrong or different. Simply they have their own process and time to learn. This happened with everything in life. Some people could achieve professional success at the edge of 28. For others the same success can arrive at the edge of 38 years. What does it mean? It means that the process of life is different for every single person in the word.
I invite you next time you are in a situation in which you are measure people under your personal and social standards, to try to put yourself in the other person’s shoes. If you can do it, you will enter in the new word in which tolerance and compassion are welcome.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Colombian Gestures
Colombian people are very expressive not only with their
words but also with their facial and body gestures. The following video can show
and explain more about it.
There
are some examples of how Colombians communicate with gestures and sometimes
words are not needed. Talking about body language, Colombians talk with their
bodies. The way we say hello it is not only words and generally words come
together with hugs, kisses, hand shake and facial gestures. In the case of a
Colombian says just hello to another Colombian without the expected gesture, it
can be taken like one is mad with the other one and a complaint of that behavior will be given. In other words if the hello word doesn’t come along
with the gesture it is like saying nothing and it is very impolite in Colombia. When a Colombian ask you how are you, depending on the answer your answer, his or her face will feel your words and they will be translated on facial
gestures like surprise, sadness, happiness, kindness or emotion by different
movements of their eyebrows, mouth, cheeks and eyes. If those gestures are not made it means like
you are not putting attention of what the other person is telling you.
Colombians
are also very touching people. They like to feel physical contact with their family,
friends and people they care for. For me, as a Colombian this cultural factor
has been the most difficult to get used to in America. I want to hug everyone I
meet or at least the ones I like such as Americans, Chinese, Koreans, Italians and so on. But when I am going to do it I feel their resistance. I understand that it is cultural but a hug means that I like you and I
care for you. Sometimes I don’t care and I do it and if they make me a face I
say: “I’m sorry, I am from Colombia and we like to hug people”.
The
body language is part of my culture, in other words it is part of me. Sometimes
I think if I need to change my gestures or minimize them in order to fit into
American culture. But that is part of me already and part of my uniqueness and
originality but for sure I need to learn when and where I can express them with
confidence and pride..
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