Why
Do We "Otherize?"
©Tom Moon,
MFT, 2010
Some years
ago I was walking with a friend in San Francisco when we passed a
group of teenagers. One of the boys shouted “I hope
you both die of AIDS disease!” I looked into his face and saw
pure hatred in his eyes. I realized that he wasn’t seeing me
at all, but a construction of his own mind. To him, because my friend
and I weren’t the same as him and his friends, we were less than
human, unworthy of respect, and deserved to be attacked merely because
we existed. He had “otherized” us.
Neuropsychological
research is demonstrating that otherizing is an innate and universal
human capacity. As soon as we place people outside of the circle
of “us” the brain automatically begins to
devalue them and to justify bad treatment of them. But why? Since otherizing
lies at the root of virtually all of humanity’s most intractable
problems – racism, sexism, homophobia, militant nationalism,
religious bigotry, etc., we’d obviously be better off without
it. So how did it ever arise in the first place? Anthropology offers
some important insights into this question. For several million years,
until the advent of agriculture, our ancestors lived in hunter-gatherer
tribes which typically had fewer than 150 members. They were threatened
by predators, starvation, and disease, and had to compete with other
tribes for scarce resources. In these harsh conditions, those who cooperated
with others in their tribe typically lived longer and had more offspring,
so natural selection favored the evolution of love, cooperation, empathy,
loyalty, and fairness within tribes. But those same evolutionary
pressures also favored ruthless aggression toward members of competing
tribes. Cooperation and aggression evolved synergistically: tribes
which were more cooperative were also more successfully aggressive,
and aggression toward other tribes demanded cooperation within tribes.
Hence the strange duality in human nature: we’re capable of deep
love and inspiring acts of self-sacrifice; but we’re also capable
of limitless cruelty. Tribalism is alive and well in the structures
of our brains.
But while
the capacity for otherizing is deeply ingrained, it’s
also true that the more lately evolved structures of the brain can
alter the behavior of the more primitive structures. Or, more simply,
our unique capacities for self-awareness, self-reflection, and deliberate
intention give us a unique capacity for freedom of action.
One thing
we can do to reign in our own otherizing is not to make the common
and naïve mistake of “otherizing the otherizers.” It’s
easy to point the finger at homophobes and racists, but it takes rare
humility to see in ourselves what we condemn in others. Anytime you
feel self-righteousness arising when you think about any other group
or individual, no matter how wrong, hateful, ignorant, etc., they are,
suspect that your own capacity to otherize has been triggered. It can
be very helpful to form the intention to be on the alert for those
situations in which you are inclined to devalue other people. Some
of these may be so automatic or seem so trivial that you can easily
overlook them. For instance, I’ve noticed that when I’m
driving, I sometimes otherize pedestrians who slow me down at intersections,
and when I’m walking I sometimes otherize drivers who are impatient
with pedestrians.
When we
become aware that we are otherizing a person or a group, it can help
to remember these words from Longfellow: “If we could
read the secret history of our enemies, we should find in each man’s
life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility.” When
we otherize we turn off the neural pathways mediating compassion and
empathy. That may be why, if you try to incline your mind toward empathy
for a despised other, you may be aware of tremendous resistance, sometimes
rationalized by thoughts about how they don’t deserve it, or
by the strange belief that to feel empathy for bad people somehow allows
them to get away with something. But if you can see the humanity in
your enemy, the intensity of otherizing automatically begins to diminish.
This has nothing to do with excusing bad behavior or condoning injustice:
we can strongly condemn cruel actions while simultaneously remembering
the humanity of the actor. Cultivating the habit of seeing “bad
actors” as also “us” takes patience, but it can be
done.
We can
also derive benefit by doing spiritual practices, such as Buddhist
lovingkindness meditation, which are designed to strengthen the capacities
for compassion and forgiveness. It is ironic that so many of us cling
so tenaciously to our habit of otherizing, because the more we strengthen
these positive capacities, the happier we tend to be. That’s
because all of the emotions connected with otherizing – contempt,
hatred, vengefulness, fear, etc. – are painful, while those connected
with empathy and compassion are soothing, peaceful, and even joyful.
In his book Buddha’s Brain, neuropsychologist Rick Hanson
tells the story of “…a Native American elder who was asked
how she had become so wise, so happy, and so respected. She answered: ‘In
my heart there are two wolves: a wolf of love and a wolf of hate. It
all depends on which one I feed each day.’”