Yesterday, while watching the news unfold about the horrific
hostage crisis and shooting by a madman in Sydney, Australia, I became concerned when CNN stated over and
over that the shooter was a Muslim cleric. And today, with news of the massacre in Peshawar, I
fear the worst. I know how we humans absorb information fed to us by media and
make subconscious connections and assumptions; Muslim clerics are terrorists.
Black guys are scary gang-bangers. Backwoods Southern boys are Klu Klux Klan
members. Catholic priests are pedophiles. Cops are racists.
Above is a photo of Shakeel Syed, a muslim cleric, standing
united with Reverend Sandie Richards, Rabbi Neil Comess-Daniels, and Reverend
Louis Chase, at our one-year memorial event for Sandy Hook last year. This
year, in conjunction with our coalition’s #LightLA campaign, Syed’s Muslim community held a vigil to remember all those lost to gun violence. Shakeel Syed
is a Muslim cleric. Shakeel Syed is a voice for peace in our community, as are the majority of Muslims. Let that be a new association in your mind.
The judgments we make about others come from the most base
part of our brains, actually termed "The Reptilian Complex" (the lizard brain).
This is where fear resides. This is where the instantaneous fight or flight
reaction comes from. This is the part of our brain that fears anything that is
not familiar, anyone who does not look like us, speak like us, live like us.
This reptilian complex is where tribalism is centered. Tribalism is what makes
us wage wars, or even attack others at sporting events should they root for the
opposite team.
But we are not "tribes" any more. We are no longer
neanderthals. We are capable of rational thought. Through commerce, culture,
and the internet, we have become a blended, interconnected world. But our human brains have not yet evolved to match the level of technology we've achieved.
Only by constantly challenging our own assumptions will we
grow. We rise above the lizard brain only by forcing ourselves to entertain the
possibility of other humans, very different from us, being just as worthy and
deserving as we are.
Let’s stop assuming that all cops are racist, all
priests are pedophiles and all blacks are looting,
rioting hoodlums. Let’s please stop assuming that all Muslims are Taliban or
ISIS terrorists. Let’s stop assuming. Period. Let’s recognize that no one comes
into this world aiming to be a heartless villain. It is only a small, sick,
tortured minority that becomes that. What if, instead, we awaken to the reality
that we are, the majority of us, not enemies, but good people with good
intention, even if we go about our lives differently?
Imagine…
For more on the workings of the lizard brain: http://hollyedexter.blogspot.com/2012/03/lizard-brain-strikes-again.html
While I agree with your notion that our brains create invalid "causation models", I would recommend avoiding the phrase "reptilian brain". It is an outdated model with no real scientific evidence supporting it, and some evidence contradicting it.
ReplyDeletehttp://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reptilian_complex