Manipulation
Grishny, on host 12.29.132.98
Friday, May 2, 2003, at 15:26:24
A conversation I had recently with some "off-line" friends of mine, in combination with several recent threads got me thinking about something.
I propose that humanity is, deep down, a selfish race. Some individuals are without a doubt more altruistic than others, but I believe that at least a grain of selfishness is embedded in the psyche of each and every human being.
Somehow, the majority of humanity manages to suppress this deep-rooted selfishness, and we have this thing called "civilization." People in general abide by written rules of civilization called "laws" (those who don't are called "criminals"), and they also abide by *unwritten* rules of civility.
Yesterday while I was out getting lunch, I had to use a drive-up ATM machine to get some cash, but I was on foot. A woman drove up in her SUV before I got there, so I stood a short distance behind her car, waiting my turn. She took some time, and while I waited I started thinking, "what would I do if somebody in a car barged past me and used the ATM in front of me?" I'd probably have been angry and murmered some unkind things about that person's character under my breath, and perhaps have given that person some dirty looks, but being who I am that would have been the extent of my outrage. I tend to go out of my way to avoid confrontation.
Fortunately, nothing of the sort happened; the SUV in front of me drove off and I walked up to the ATM and got my money. Someone in a car did pull up behind me while I was using the machine, but they politely kept their distance, waiting their turn. And I thought, what keeps people from just doing whatever they want, whenever they want? What keeps "might makes right" from becoming our everyday philosophy? Civilization, I suppose. We suppress our selfish nature for the good of all.
But it expresses itself in other ways. Everybody still wants their own way; their own happiness, but not at the expense of breaking those unwritten rules and being looked down on by society. So instead we manipulate. Maybe with subtlety; maybe we don't even realize we're doing it, but we find methods to coerce others into doing what we want.
It's "the gang" in high school exerting peer pressure to get the one kid with principles to go along. It's the wife giving her husband the cold shoulder because he forgot their anniversary. It's the coworker turning up the volume on his radio a little higher than everybody else because he likes his station the best. It's the mother refusing to praise her daughter's accomplishment because she wants her to choose a different boyfriend, or college major, or wedding dress.
Is manipulation always wrong? Could it not be used for good purpose? I don't know... it seems to me that the whole concept of it is for personal gain. Certainly, the case could be made that the husband *deserves* to be snubbed by his wife for treating her ill, but wouldn't their relationship be better off if she communicated with him; told him her feelings and gave him the opportunity to make it right? (No, I'm not posting this because I forgot my wife's anniversary; it's just an example.) I lean toward thinking that manipulation *is* always wrong.
Of course I'm not so cynical as to think that everyone tries to manipulate those around them all the time. In fact I believe that most of it is done unconsciously, and I do believe that there are people around who are characterized more by their selflessness than their selfishness. I wish I were one of them.
Grishny
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