Another Man's Hedge

in Reflections4 days ago

Yesterday, I called out to the elderly neighbours, but they weren't home, so I went ahead and did the same as what I have a couple tines before. I trimmed their side of the hedge. It isn't a hard job for the most part, just awkward and takes some time, and then the raking of the cuttings after. While I was starting the raking, they came home and I said that I had gone ahead and done it, and they were grateful. When you are in your mid-eighties, getting some unsolicited help is likely a blessing, but also a reminder of that feeling of loss of capability.


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I was having a discussion with a therapist the other day, who believes that I have trouble asking for help, which might be true. However, I also think that we shouldn't always have to ask for help. Not because we are so independent and self-sufficient, but because people will offer support without being directly asked.

This is being compassionate.

But it requires paying attention to the environment and situations of others to be able to identify when help might be required. Too often though, people rely on empathy to do this, which means having to feel something first, which works as the trigger to help. This means that if someone doesn't feel that trigger fire, help can never be offered. And in a society that has optimised for self-absorption and -satisfaction, fewer people see when help is required outside of their own narrow focus area, let alone have the will and sense of duty to actually offer support.

Compassion on the other hand gets triggered as soon as there is the identification of a potential need, even if it doesn't generate an emotional response. This means it doesn't require being able to identify with the issue personally, just that there is an issue that someone else has and they may need some help. It is a far more robust mechanism for diverse community support, but it has been undermined by the continual drive to value emotions first and foremost.

While I don't like relying on people, I also acknowledge I have my own gaps as needs. Not asking for support means I a not going to get any in the current culture, and I find it incredibly sad. I a not talking about from strangers or doctors who don't know me, but from those closest. Even when people see I have a need, they will not offer. There are many reasons for it as we all have our own issues, but that is the thing about building a healthy community, because some personal issues can be shared amongst the group to lighten the load for everyone.

It is no wonder to me why so many people are having mental health issues, because life has become more complex, as well as more individualistic. Everyone seems to have doubled-down on independence and the "everyone dies alone" position, without considering if we have to live alone also.

We don't, yet we are.

Vulnerability isn't just about asking for help from others, it is also about being open to helping others, sometimes even when it isn't at first welcome. I don't want to step on the neighbours toes and give them the feeling of incapability on old age, because I know what it is to be reliant on others to do what I could do earlier. Yet, I also know they aren't going to ask me to do it, even though they know I will happily help them.

Healthy community closes the gaps.

Hedges are barriers, but they are shared barriers that grow and change over time. They aren't fences to keep the others out, they are borders that cause neighbours to collaborate. It takes both sides of the fence to be maintained for the hedge to look good, and the responsibility of maintainenance belongs to each side. But, just like a hedge grows and changes, so too do neighbours ad that means that while the responsibility of maintenance might not shift, the performance of maintenance can.

If I see someone in need in the walking world, I will help. I don't need to know them, I don't need to relate to their situation. I don't need to feel bad for them, or feel like helping at all. All I need is to recognise they might be in need, and then offer a hand. They don't have to accept if they choose, but they can if they want.

The world is changing rapidly due to technology and while it offers lots of aids and convenience, it is also going to create a lot of gaps in people's experience, and cause a lot of suffering. Yet, because we have created a near global culture of individualism and self-gratification, disconnected from others in a delusion of self-sufficiency, communities and society as a whole has become hostile, and an everyone in it for themselves space. Community is no longer a supportive framework, because it has been eroded down, bonds broken, until all that is left are small units struggling to do the best they can for themselves, with no regard to others.

Micro corporations.

It makes us all vulnerable.
It makes us all weaker.

The hedges have become walls that cannot withstand the pressures of time, and when they fall, there is no defense, because we stand and live alone.

The way we all die.

Taraz
[ Gen1: Hive ]


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The thing is this modern society which often treats dependence as weakness and independence as the professional level. Yet every meaningful part of human life is built on connection, even the same system, which I believe is the reason behind all this, works on the model of community level cooperation. We learn from others, heal through others and find purpose through relationships. The paradox is that while we all carry burdens, many of us have become hesitant to either ask for help or offer it. Like even offering it is becoming a negative thing nowadays. And in trying so hard not to need anyone, we sometimes create the very loneliness we fear.

Moreover, I think vulnerability is deeper than simply admitting our struggles. It requires the courage to trust that human beings are meant to support one another. Many people are not unwilling to help; they are uncertain, distracted or afraid of crossing boundaries. The whole concept of rigid individualism is causing quite harmful effects. A healthy community is not one where nobody has needs, but one where needs can be expressed without shame and support can be offered without judgment.

Btw, this capital system promotes taking as much as you can, while giving bare minimum in return. So psychologically, we are being trained this way :)

Like even offering it is becoming a negative thing nowadays

For sure. It has been seen as a belief that someone is incapable, even when they are. It is about ego, not reality.

A healthy community is not one where nobody has needs, but one where needs can be expressed without shame and support can be offered without judgment.

And herein lays one of the major issues, right? We have a system that is built to judge at every level, regardless of relationship. It isn't people we know, but strangers on the internet in other countries, that have never met. Our "vulnerability" is put to people we shouldn't trust while we are foregoing the opportunity to build relationships with people we should.

So psychologically, we are being trained this way :)

Absolutely. I have another article already written that touches on this ;)

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I happen to know one of my neighbors names: Paul and Monica. On the other side there used to live a "Dog Lady" after a few years she sold her house and now an Indian family lives there, don't know their names either.

It is very common to live in the neighborhood for over ten years and don't know any of your neighbors... I think that is pretty standard for American West coast.

Pretty strange, don't you think? People are feeling increasingly unsafe, yet the very systems that keep them safe, are being neglected.

For unsafe situations we have an ax and guns placed in strategic locations... You have to be able to defend yourself in America...

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This past weekend when my sister in law got a flat tire, I was shocked to find that not a single person stopped to ask if she needed help in the two hours she was sitting on the side of the road waiting for a tow truck. Ridiculous!

It is common these days. No one "has the time" and then they say things like "it could be a scam" or some other excuse. Society is collapsing and it is death by a billion anti-social cuts.

It can be scary, you never know what crazy stuff other people might try to do. Sometimes though, you just have to take that risk.

It is probably more likely that someone with a death wish is going to swerve into you in oncoming traffic than get in trouble hlping a person change a tyre.

Probably, but then again who knows these days...

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I think we can build stronger relationships with just by being aware of each other's needs. Mindset matters ;)

Mindset definitely matters. What I see is that people's minds are set on taking all they can, and giving as little as they can.

Sometimes we refrain from doing a good deed just so the other person doesn't feel bad, even though they might actually be very happy about it. It's better to just do what we think is right; if there is any objection, we can simply choose not to do it next time.

It's better to just do what we think is right; if there is any objection, we can simply choose not to do it next time.

Ask for forgiveness later.

What you did for your elderly neighbors was very kind. I agree that sometimes people should not always wait to be asked before helping. A small act of kindness can make a big difference in someone's life. Sadly many people are becoming more focus on themselves these days, and true community spirit is slowly reducing.

until all that is left are small units struggling to do the best they can for themselves,

I've had awful neighbors, and fabulous neighbors. But I never had a neighbor who would prune my side of a hedge. I'm sure your neighbors are delighted to have you there. Our elderly are the most isolated of all. Thank you for helping them out.

Everyone just minds their own business and ignores the obvious and why when you offer and help others people are shocked and appreciative because it is so rare. If I see someone needing assistance or help I do not think twice yet others would just watch like it is not their problem. I think it is how people have been raised because my kids would help others and think this is normal.

which might be true

BAHAHAHAHHAHAHAAAAA maybe change "might be" to "is" XD

it requires paying attention to the environment and situations of others to be able to identify when help might be required

I wonder if that falls under mental loading where the people doing most of the mental loading might not notice because they're too wrapped up in working through their own task lists or are too desperate to avoid adding any more to it and so just feel guilty about not helping later, and the people who don't or actively refuse to do any mental loading at all will sputter the "you should have asked" excuse.

Then if you are willing to help apparently it makes a world of difference between saying "can I help" and "do you need help" and good luck figuring out which one is more appropriate to which person at what time x_x

My father is stubborn, and becomes irate if anyone offers to help before he has decided he needs help, despite (or because of) the issues he faces as he ages.

"Good fences make good neighbors," the old saying goes, but not because it erects a barrier. It marks the point of trespassing. Building good relationships (like helping with the hedges) shouldn't be prohibited by those good fences. Bad fences split Berlin for a long time, and that's another matter entirely.

I like the thoughtful act of kindness you did for your neighbors. Unsolicited help can feel like a blessing. Not all people are like that; but I'm sure there are still many good people around the world despite how cruel the world for quite sometimes.

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