Mole
Permabanned
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 20,282
Personal experience is what makes this site great.
If it wasn't for us all sitting around here and talking about personal experience, then what would be the point?
We would just make a book list of things to read and classes to take.
Personal experience is what we have- and its great to see all the viewpoints of real people- not just what we read in books or areas of expertise. (OR some random profound and original idea that we've just invented. In which case we'd be at the genius convention, not here.)
I do agree that quoting personal experience for an argument or as gospel can get awfully annoying! But, I guess that's just the nature of these kinds of discussions. (In my experience, anyways !!!)
If we were only allowed to talk about these great broad views that we've developed or had some area of expertise, then this site would be a pretty desolate land. (And a boring one at that!) We go to work and school to talk about things that we know for fact, right? Why not spew off some opinions and stories for fun?
(Excuse my dogma, by the way. I know this sets typologycentral back in it's broader mission to achieve larger social ends.)
The really nicest thing is to marry personal experience with the experience of our family, our peers, our affiliations and our culture.
Our own personal experience is directly available to us but our experience of our family, our peers, our clubs, societies and religions, not to mention the worlds of science, literature and art, are all mediated to us by language, literacy and the internet.
For instance a poem based entirely on personal experience is mawkish.
But a poem that addresses the whole world, including personal experience, lifts off, takes off and flies.
To talk only in terms of personal experience is like crawling awkwardly along the bottom of the ocean like a crab, when you could be flying like a stingray or cruising like a shark or floating like a jellyfish in the wide and free, deep blue sea.
But most of all our well-being and our happiness depend on finding something larger than ourselves.
And indeed our happiness and well-being depend on our gratitude for something larger than ourselves.