All of us have filters.
Yeah, the flimsy paper kind you slip into the coffee-maker; the kind you hope you remember to throw away before it starts to grow tiny mold islands. (Read between the lines for unintended confession, ay?)
But there’s also the filters in our heads–the set of criteria we use to sift through our daily experiences.
Example: Person A walks into the staff lounge, waves hello and then makes a beeline for the coffee pot, which is near empty. Without saying a word, Person A pours himself a cup, rinses out the coffee pot, refills the grounds and brews a new pot.
Person B and Person C are sitting on the folding chairs around the break table, watching Person A.
Person B filters the situation like this: Its nice of Person A to take the time to clean out the coffee pot and brew a new pot for the next person, even though I’m sure he just stopped in quickly between work responsibilities.
Person C filters the same situation like this: Wow. What’s up with Person A? They barely even acknowledged us sitting here. No small talk. Nothing. Why are they acting cold toward me?
Filters.
We all have them.
But a huge chunk of awareness is…
realizing which ones we’re using.
Here’s a few common filters:
people in ways they would deem fair. (Gulp. I have to admit, I use this filter sometimes.)The sucky part, of course, is that the coffee-maker metaphor carries over. If we keep using the same, worn-out filters, mold starts to cloud over the way we see the world. We can’t see reality beyond the story lines we’ve created. And we filter out the good, or we fail to take responsibility for ourselves, because we’re too busy collecting evidence to reinforce the hypotheses (filters) we are trying to prove.
Even more of a bummer? Sometimes we collect skewed information and repeat it to others. We unfairly influence our spouse, friends or others by presenting them with all of the filtered data we collected and driving them to a conclusion that may be…well, partly right…but incomplete….because it’s filtered.
(*These are summaries of the lenses presented in the book, Bridges of Communication)
What about you? What filters do you use? Or notice others using? And how do you go about learning to see life a new way?