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Socrates

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Socrates, the Father of Western Philosophy, is known to have said, ‘The unexamined life is not worth living’. With the word unexamined, I believe Socrates might have referred to observed, analyzed, or inspected carefully. It is common for individuals to question whether their life has purpose, or not. I do agree that it is important to reflect on, study, or analyze one’s life and the lives of others.

The attitude one has with reference to self, or others, is influential for how one views life. An arrogant attitude, that of one who believes he or she ‘knows it all’, is often an offensive characteristic that closes doors to relationships and opportunities. A humble attitude contributes to a willingness to examine one’s life, and the lives of those around – a genuine open-mindedness, one with a true learner’s heart.

To be willing to read or listen to a different point of view without feeling threatened, embarrassed, or humiliated is part of reflecting. Sharing of one’s self without being dogmatic, gullible, inflexible, or unchangeable is another goal with the examined life. One who is not willing to examine, or ask the hard questions when life seems unfair or does not make sense, misses out on a rich depth that can rise from the ashes of tragedy. An active ownership of life offers a higher degree of satisfaction versus a more passive, mindless ‘going through the motions’ which has an attitude of investing the least amount of energy and yields a greater degree of satisfaction.

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