Consider It From The Other Person’s Perspective Podcast Por  arte de portada

Consider It From The Other Person’s Perspective

Consider It From The Other Person’s Perspective

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In this episode of Navigate the Day, I reflect on a passage from Marcus Aurelius that challenges how we respond when someone frustrates or wrongs us. His advice is simple in theory but difficult in practice: when someone does something harmful, try to understand what they believed was good or necessary when they acted. Most people don’t wake up intending to do harm—they act according to what they think will benefit them, protect them, or solve a problem. When I remember that, anger has a way of loosening its grip.

That idea sounds reasonable, but I have to admit it doesn’t always come naturally to me. My instinct is often to jump to the worst interpretation of people’s behavior. I’m quick to see selfishness, ignorance, or indifference behind what others do. Sometimes that judgment even extends to myself. It’s easier for me to assume the negative than to pause and consider what someone else might have been thinking at the time.

One uncomfortable realization is that I’ve spent a lot of time judging others without fully examining my own perspective. I criticize selfish behavior in the world, yet I often isolate myself from people entirely. I assume others are acting out of ignorance or self-interest, but if I’m honest, I’ve made plenty of decisions based on my own limited understanding too. That’s exactly the point Marcus Aurelius was making. We’re all capable of acting on mistaken beliefs. Recognizing that shared fallibility doesn’t excuse harmful behavior, but it can soften the anger that usually follows it.

This reflection also forced me to look at how my own assumptions shape the way I move through life. I often talk about fear holding me back—fear of failure, fear of making mistakes, fear that the changes I want won’t work out. But sometimes that fear disguises itself as certainty. I act as if I already know the outcome of things I haven’t even tried. In a strange way, that kind of pessimism can be its own form of arrogance. It keeps me from questioning my assumptions and learning something new.

Stoicism doesn’t promise an easy way through these struggles. What it offers instead is a shift in perspective. When I step back and try to understand the beliefs behind someone’s actions—including my own—it becomes easier to respond with patience instead of resentment. And when I question the stories I’m telling myself about the future, I leave room for possibilities that my fear might otherwise shut down.

This episode is a reflection on how difficult—and how important—it is to see beyond our first impressions. Whether we’re dealing with conflict, regret, or uncertainty about the future, understanding the beliefs behind our actions can bring a little more clarity and compassion into the situation.

I’m still working through these ideas myself, trying to balance honesty about my frustrations with a willingness to see things from another angle. If nothing else, this week reminded me that most people—including me—are just doing the best they can with the understanding they have at the time. And sometimes remembering that is enough to turn anger into patience, and judgment into a little bit of understanding.

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Mediations and Prompts influenced from The Daily Stoic Books

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