Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Week 24: Enjoy Humility

This is a much bigger topic than this humble little chapter would suggest. Humility is as difficult to teach as it is to learn. As Peterson and Seligman point out, “modern Western culture encourages the pursuit of pride” (Character Strengths and Virtues, Chapter 20, page 462) and our culture has become increasingly narcissistic. We end up with candidates running for public office literally being caught with their pants down.

Tangney (2000, 2002) identified key features of humility:
  • Accurate sense of self, both strengths and limitations
  • Ability to acknowledge errors and shortcomings
  • Openness to advice and new experience
  • Keeping self in perspective, even forgetting the importance of self
  • Appreciation of others
Peterson and Seligman observed that humble individuals do not “willfully distort information in order to defend, repair, or verify their own self-image.” It is about being sufficiently objective about one’s own behavior that we can respond to challenges to our behaviors, viewpoints and opinions in a non-defensive manner.
There are several areas where lack of humility causes distress:
  • Relationships—John Gottman identifies two destructive relationship patterns: Contempt and Defensiveness. A contemptuous person attempts to gain superiority by putting other people down, whereas a defensive person blames others for their shortcomings and blocks all feedback and interpersonal learning. Marriage becomes a constant battle ground when partners rely on these patterns of interaction.
  • Medical care and therapy—many illnesses have a behavioral component that is often very hard to change. Despite costly consultations and the weight of “empirical evidence,” people often persist in thinking that the experts don’t really understand them and that they are unique exceptions who can defy the odds and continue with their lifestyles. Einstein said the definition of insanity is “doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.” Humility allows us to accept feedback and make changes for the better. Likewise, practitioners who reject the lived experience of their patients cannot provide truly compassionate care.
  • Society—with too much self-admiration and unhealthy competition, risk-taking and cheating become problems in the workplace and the community (Twenge and Campbell, The Narcissism Epidemic, 2009). The current polarization of the political system and the role of special interest groups in perpetuating certain social problems are examples.
Perhaps you know a person who insists it is the world that is wrong and that only correct viewpoint is their viewpoint. Despite their evident suffering, they are being extremely prideful in not being able or willing to acknowledge they could be part of the problem. When we look instead at problems as between people rather than within people, humility is possible. You don’t have to be wrong so I can be right.
Dr. Hanson encourages taking a “panoramic, big-picture view of situations” to understand our own role and contribution in the bigger network of human interaction, politics, and economics. When we can accept the opinions, viewpoints, and needs of others as equally important as our own, then we can begin to approach the beauty of humility.