i'd like to share a story.
once upon a time i pretended to be a hot-shot college student. i was going to school on a dual english/philosophy major, and man, i thought i knew it all. i read too much nietzsche, rand, and des cartes, i wrote painfully long and drawn out essays on my anti-war opinions (that i no longer have) and my hippie society opinions (which are no longer valid), the usual smart-ass kid. then i signed up for this philosophy class, and damn did i learn from it. the person teaching this class was a younger guy, late 30's maybe. he was a black belt in karate. he was a devout roman catholic. member of the knights of colombus. gun rights advocate. he wrote his master's thesis on the concept of "just war", and it was a good thesis. essentially he was my polar opposite at the time. his class was at 8am and attendance was not mandatory, did not affect your grade at all, yet there was seldom an empty seat because it was such an engaging class.
we often split the class in to two groups and held debates. this class is where i truly learned how to organize an argument, how to form solid concepts with other people that as a group we could stand behind. and then one day, this guy has the balls to say "okay, today we are going to debate on the issue of abortion"... he told us that for the sake of this debate we couldn't remain neutral on the issue, we had to choose one side or the other. it took a good long while for everyone to choose a side and stand on one side of the room or the other. there were maybe 20 or so people in each group, it was a pretty even split. we organized, we chose our spokeperson, we got out our 3x5 index cards and were about to start fleshing out our arguments and counterpoints, we were about to start when he sprung the trap...
"oh yeah. by the way. as a learning exercise we will have the pro-choice people arguing for the pro-life point of view, and vice-versa."
the room went dead silent.
but you know what? we all learned so very much. how to see things from the other point of view. how to truly understand what your opponent is trying to say. how to have empathy for the other side, even if you don't agree with them. how to really listen to someone else instead of ignoring them while you formulate your own thoughts for when it's your turn to speak again. i learned that just because someone's opinion doesn't mesh with my own that it does not mean that one of us has to be wrong, that there are so many shades of grey in between.
so has anyone else had an experience like this? does anyone else have a defining moment where they really learned something important, or really figured out how to listen? is anyone still waiting for that golden moment while they're locked in to their own rigid concepts of what is right or wrong?
as an aside, i recently found this guy again on facebook, and we still have almost as little as common as we did then. but we were both pretty glad to run in to each other again, nonetheless.
and as a disclaimer, this is not a thread about the abortion issue. i only included that aspect of the story to illustrate what a hot-button issue it was, to show it was something that a lot of people have strong opinions about. like war or foreigners.

