Right, Wrong, and The Truth

truthJennifer Hoffman – I recently had a rather heated discussion with a friend who was trying to convince me that I was wrong about something. She was quite irritated that I would not agree with her because as far as I was concerned I wasn’t wrong, I just had a different perspective than she did, which was my truth and it conflicted with her truth.

I also noticed that I wasn’t trying as hard to convince her of my ‘right-ness’ as she was in insisting that I was wrong. This wasn’t about right or wrong, though, it was about truth.

Any time there is a right or wrong in a situation, the real issue at hand is the truth, and whose truth is true.

Some people will go to great lengths to assert that they know best, they are right, and they know the truth. But truth is a funny thing because as much as we want to know ‘the Truth’, all we can really know for sure is what is true for us. Someone else’s truth is theirs alone. We may agree or share an opinion about it but truth, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. And when they ask us to validate their truth, what they are really asking for is validation that they are worthy of our validation, acceptance, and ultimately, of our love.

When my friend insisted that I agree with her, I knew it was personal and went far beyond me and this small incident. For her, it one more time that she had to prove herself and her truth and I was one more person who didn’t agree with her. Although I did agree with her in principle, I just didn’t agree with her truth.

Since she was making this so  personal I had to wonder who had made her so wrong in her life that she needed to have her truth validated by hearing me repeat it back to her.

Why wasn’t it enough for her to know her truth and be comfortable with it? Because it wasn’t about her truth, it was about getting me to agree that it was true.

In changing and uncertain times, when the truths that have sustained us for so long suddenly become no longer true, we need to re-establish a foundation where we feel secure and validated. A changing truth can be that someone we love doesn’t love us any more, or the job that sustained us doesn’t need us any more, a friend decides they no longer want our friendship, or we have to acknowledge that we have been living a life that doesn’t make us happy.

We can find a new truth but that isn’t what we really want. We want someone to tell us that we are right, true, worthy and deserving. So we go looking for truth when all we really want is validation, acceptance, and love.

Because that is our greatest need, to be valued and valuable, validated by others so we know we exist and are heard, loved, appreciated and to know that someone, anyone, agrees with our truth. And our fear is that the truth will reveal what we have always been afraid to find out, that we are not worthy, lovable or deserving.

Is it possible to be comfortable with our truth, even if no one else thinks it’s true?

It depends on what it is but since truth is personal, as long as it is true for us, we’re aligned with it, it’s authentic and it makes us happy, that’s the only truth we need to know.

Copyright (c) 2017 by Jennifer Hoffman. All rights reserved.

SF Source Enlightening Life Dec 2017

3 thoughts on “Right, Wrong, and The Truth

  1. Is truth limited to our personal truths? I’m not a linguist, but I was taught that when speaking English we use descriptive adjectives to describe nouns. I break down truth into two major categories: relative and Absolute. Relative truth or individual truth and opinions, and Absolute Truth which may called the actual, down to earth, truth (as observed by those beings in the spirit realms). Perhaps Absolute Truth is a combination of all relative truths.

    I think this is important for us to discuss as we are currently in a transition phase approaching the Golden Age and ascension. Notice how we are experiencing that all secrets and lies of the past and present are now being revealed. What we are now seeking is Absolute Truth – not opinions – about our history, government, religion, our origins, 911, extraterrestrials, our place in the Universe of over two trillion galaxies, etc.

  2. A very wise friend often gave this quote in our ‘Comparative Religions’ class….
    “you don’t have to be wrong for me to be right.”

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