Erin
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Nov 24, 2004
- Messages
- 2,783
I agree with Sizzle. People can change. It just takes an honest desire to want to change and a complete comittment to the process of changing and bettering oneself. It''s also my experience that people with really dysfunctional personalities have to "hit a brick wall" so to speak to prompt that desire to change. Something really bad or devastating has to happen to them for them to want to do something about it.Date: 2/24/2010 10:14:32 AM
Author: Sizzle
As someone with a social service background, I not only think people can change, I have seen it. I think changing your inherent personality generally requires something significant to occur that makes you re evaluate your life or see the world in a different light. I feel for those who do not beleive in people''s ability to change. That''s like saying every bad thing you have ever done should be held against you because that''s who you are and you will do it again. I have done many things I am not proud of (when I was young), but that''s not who I am today. I would hate to be judged by my past mistakes.
Date: 2/24/2010 12:31:24 AM
Author: Haven
I think people can change. It depends on how open they are to allowing life''s experience affect the way they think about and interact with the world, but I think people can change.
I firmly believe that education is change. As we are exposed to ideas, beliefs, experiences, and people who change the way we think or what we think, we change.
My favorite teacher used to say ''If you don''t look back at your old self every five years or so and think ''Man, I was such a dork!'' you''re no longer growing.'' I like that.
Concrete example: I know that I am much more compassionate now as a 29 year old than I was as a 25 year old. I''m also more kind.