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Goodness That Doesn’t Depend on Others

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I said it with complete confidence, almost as if it were self-evident. “At some point,” I said, “being good has to be reciprocal. If someone has no principles, why should I keep mine?”

He didn’t respond immediately. He let the question sit between us, the way one lets a fragile object rest before touching it. “That,” he finally said, “is exactly where the real test begins.”

I looked at him, a little unsettled.

“Being good with good people,” he continued, “is not a moral achievement. It is convenient. The question is what happens to your principles when the other person has none.”

I had never framed it that way.

He leaned forward slightly. “If your ethics rise and fall with how others treat you, then you are not principle-centered. You are other-centered.”

That stung, because it felt true. I thought of how easily my tone changes. How quickly patience disappears when I feel wronged. How naturally I justify sharpness by calling it ‘self-respect’ or ‘realism’.

He seemed to read that hesitation. “Look carefully,” he said. “If someone is polite, you are polite. If someone is rude, you feel entitled to being rude. That is not morality. That is mirroring.”

I tried to defend myself. “But isn’t that human? Isn’t it unrealistic to expect goodness when there is injustice?”

He nodded. “It is human. That’s why it’s common. But principles are not meant to describe what is commonly practiced. They describe what you stand for when you are pulled toward the satisfaction of reciprocating others.” He paused, taking a sip from his coffee mug, then added, “Otherwise, your values are not values. They are bargains.”

That word stayed with me—bargains. I remembered a conversation I had once witnessed at work. A colleague had been consistently unfair, dismissive, and almost humiliating. When someone finally responded with equal harshness, everyone nodded approvingly. “He deserved it,” they said. And yet, something in that moment felt small. Satisfying, perhaps—but small.

He gave an example that shifted everything: “There was a time,” he said, “when oppression reached unbearable levels. People were tortured, boycotted, and killed. If there was ever a moment where retaliation felt justified, it was then.”

I knew what he was referring to.

“And yet,” he continued, “even at points where consequences felt inevitable, the message was not driven by revenge. It carried an extraordinary hope—that people might still understand, still turn back, still find mercy.”

I interrupted him. “But weren’t they unjust? Didn’t they deserve punishment?”

“They did,” he said calmly. “Justice and mercy are not opposites. But notice this: the moral standard was not lowered just because the other side had no standards.”

That sentence landed heavily. He explained that this is the difference between reciprocal morality and principled morality. Reciprocal morality says: I will be as good as you are. Principled morality says: I will be as good as I aspire to be. “Your character,” he said, “is not revealed by how you treat decent people. It is revealed by how you behave when decency is absent.”

I thought about how often I excuse myself by saying, “Anyone would react this way.” He gently dismantled that comfort. “Anyone can react,” he said. “Very few can remain anchored.” He wasn’t asking for passivity. He wasn’t suggesting silence in the face of injustice. He was drawing a line between standing firm and becoming contaminated. “You can resist wrongdoing,” he said, “without becoming it. You can oppose injustice without letting it decide who you become.”

He told me something that felt almost counterintuitive: “When you abandon your principles because someone else has none, you hand them more power than they already have.”

That unsettled me. I realized how often my anger feels righteous, how easily I tell myself that harshness is strength. But beneath it, there is something reactive, something fragile.

He looked at me and said, “If your goodness disappears the moment it is not returned, then it was never rooted deeply enough.” There was no accusation in his voice. Just clarity. I thought about how this applies everywhere—marriages, workplaces, politics, and social media. We are constantly measuring others rather than deciding how ethical we aspire to be.

He ended quietly, almost gently. “Principles are not tested in fair weather,” he said. “They are tested when keeping them costs you something.”

I sat with that. It became clear that goodness, when conditional, is not goodness at all. It is strategy. And strategy collapses the moment conditions change. Standing on principles is not about winning moral points. It is about refusing to let the absence of values around you hollow out the values within you.

That day, I understood something that has stayed with me since:  Being good to good people is easy. Being good despite bad behavior is rare. And only the second tells you who you truly are.

Staying Whole

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I told him that most people I know speak very confidently about vision. They know what kind of life they want, what values they admire, what sort of society they wish existed. But when things become difficult, when pressure appears, that clarity seems to dissolve. I asked him where the gap really is.

He smiled and said, “The gap appears exactly at the point where vision meets reality. Until then, values are cheap. They cost nothing. The real moment is when the situation demands action—when convenience, fear, or temptation enters the room. That is when a person is no longer dealing with ideas but with character.”

I asked him what makes that moment so difficult.

He said it is because every decision carries an opportunity cost. When you choose one thing, you quietly abandon another. People usually think of this in terms of money or time, but it can have many other facets. Taking a moral stand also entails such costs. Abiding by one’s ideals and values becomes difficult when their cost becomes uncomfortably high in one’s eyes. That is where our commitment to our ideals and principles is truly tested.

He said this is why most societies remember certain people long after they are gone. History does not preserve the names of those who gained the most. It preserves those who stayed upright when it was costly. Those whose actions did not fracture under pressure.

I asked him what actually holds a person together in such moments.

He said integrity. Then he paused and added that he prefers to think of integrity as being whole. One unit. No internal contradictions. What you believe, what you say, and what you do are not pulling in opposite directions.

He clarified that integrity does not mean perfection. It means honesty. If you fall short, you admit it without excuses. You do not redesign your principles to protect your comfort. You do not justify inconsistency just because it feels necessary in the moment.

He asked me to think about how easily people criticize dishonesty, yet defend their own small lies when the situation feels tight. That, he said, is where wholeness quietly breaks.

Then he shifted the conversation toward honor and self-respect. He said most people misunderstand this entirely. We assume that dignity means reacting strongly when others behave badly. That patience or grace somehow lowers us.

He said self-respect has nothing to do with how others behave. It has everything to do with how sincerely you live by your own principles. People treat you according to their standards—money, power, ego, insecurity. Your dignity is measured by yours.

I felt that land heavily. How often had I confused my worth with someone else’s behavior?

He said that abandoning one’s principles just because someone else failed theirs is not self-respect. That is self-betrayal. Honor increases only when action aligns with conviction.

I asked him why, then, people still fail so often in moments that seem small.

He said that human beings are addicted to immediate relief. When a problem appears, the first impulse is to end discomfort at any cost. So we lie to escape tension. We justify to save face. We become defensive to protect our ego. The problem disappears—but the damage remains.

He told me to treat this as a principle: most of the time, when you rush to solve an immediate issue, you sacrifice long-term vision. Relationships weaken. Trust erodes. Character dulls. He challenged me to find exceptions. I couldn’t think of many.

He shared a small example. Sitting in a limited space, talking to someone, when a child interrupts repeatedly. The easiest solution is irritation—sharp words, dismissal, removal. The immediate inconvenience ends. But something else is lost. Even if the adult forgets, the child may not. And that possibility alone, he said, should slow us down.

Then he offered a different way to see challenges. What if, instead of obstacles to comfort, they are opportunities to strengthen integrity? What if each challenge is quietly measuring how whole we really are?

He reminded me that life does not test integrity only in dramatic moments. It tests it in ordinary ones—how you speak when irritated, how you decide when no one is watching, how you act when lying would be easier. Those who practice integrity in small things, he said, build the capacity to stand in larger trials. Those who compromise daily find it nearly impossible to remain upright when it truly matters.

As the conversation came to a close, he said something that stayed with me. Integrity and honor are not abstract ideals. They are daily disciplines. They guide decisions not by asking what you gained, but by asking whether you remained whole.

Challenges will continue to come. That is inevitable. The only real question is whether we will use them to shrink ourselves for comfort—or to strengthen ourselves for truth.

And like every other decision, he said softly, that choice also has a cost.