I think personal values and ethics come to play in this good/bad thing in a big way.
In my family of origin, you were a bad person if you didn't go to church every day.
In my own framework, I don't go to church. But if I did, it would be hypocritical to go to church and be a thief, for instance. That would be bad.
Why bad? Maybe bad is a terrible word to use. I think it would be inconsistent. And I have learned to not trust people who are inconsistent insofar as my values and ethics. So I stay away from them. Not because they are bad or good (again, I believe that is relative to the players) but rather because it causes confusion in my brain/nervous system.
This has been a big question for me along the way of healing. The construct of good/bad clearly was not helping my worldview because I kept falling in with 'bad' people. Now that I have changed the verbage (who am I to determine what is bad or good but rather does it match my vision) it is much easier to figure out who is supportive to me and who screws with my sense of safety, belonging, kindness, etc, etc etc.
It's so indiviidual, but really do find that the social construct is not so much help for my traumatized self.
In my family of origin, you were a bad person if you didn't go to church every day.
In my own framework, I don't go to church. But if I did, it would be hypocritical to go to church and be a thief, for instance. That would be bad.
Why bad? Maybe bad is a terrible word to use. I think it would be inconsistent. And I have learned to not trust people who are inconsistent insofar as my values and ethics. So I stay away from them. Not because they are bad or good (again, I believe that is relative to the players) but rather because it causes confusion in my brain/nervous system.
This has been a big question for me along the way of healing. The construct of good/bad clearly was not helping my worldview because I kept falling in with 'bad' people. Now that I have changed the verbage (who am I to determine what is bad or good but rather does it match my vision) it is much easier to figure out who is supportive to me and who screws with my sense of safety, belonging, kindness, etc, etc etc.
It's so indiviidual, but really do find that the social construct is not so much help for my traumatized self.
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