The Art of Being Human: A Lesson in Forgiving—Forward
Published by Mark McFillen on
The Art of Being Human: A Lesson in Forgiving—Forward
Opening
I want to start with a confession.
I used to be that driver — the one who would lay on the horn the moment someone cut me off, the one who would mutter a few choice words at a stranger I’d never meet again, the one who treated every small mistake on the road like a personal attack.
And maybe you’ve been that driver too.
Because on the surface, it feels justified. Someone else messes up, and we react. Instantly. Automatically. Emotionally.
But then one day, something shifted for me.
The Moment
I was sitting at a red light replaying some earlier traffic annoyance when a simple, almost embarrassingly obvious thought hit me:
What if… I didn’t lose my cool?
What if instead of assuming the worst about someone else’s driving, I remembered that I also make mistakes behind the wheel?
I’ve cut people off.
I’ve missed green lights because I was mid‑text.
I’ve drifted lanes while adjusting the radio.
So why was I expecting perfection from everyone else?
The Experiment
So I tried something new.
I started forgiving people before they even messed up.
Not because they earned it.
Not because I’m some enlightened monk.
But because I realized something important:
Most people aren’t trying to ruin my day. They’re just being human.
And I am too.
The Expansion
And when I zoomed out, I realized this wasn’t just about traffic.
It was about everything.
The coworker who snaps.
The stranger who bumps into you.
The friend who forgets to text back.
The barista who gets your order wrong.
Most of the time, it’s not malice.
It’s not personal.
It’s not an attack.
It’s just humans improvising their way through a complicated world.
The Shift
And here’s the surprising part:
Forgiving strangers made my life better.
My days felt lighter.
My stress evaporated faster.
My mood wasn’t hijacked by someone else’s mistake.
Forgiveness turned out to be less about them…
and more about the kind of human I want to be.
Closing
So now, when someone cuts me off, I don’t give them the finger.
I don’t lay on the horn.
I don’t let their mistake rent space in my head.
I just think:
“It’s okay. I don’t think you meant to ruin my day.
#shithappens.”
Because at the end of the day, we’re all just trying to get where we’re going — safely, imperfectly, humanly.
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