I once told him, almost defensively, “I don’t let people talk to me like that. It’s a matter of self-respect.”
He looked at me for a moment, then asked quietly, “Whose respect are you protecting?”
I was about to answer, but he raised his hand. “Think carefully.”
He explained that what we often call dignity is actually a reaction, not a value. “In our culture,” he said, “self-respect has become conditional. If someone is rude, we believe we must respond with equal harshness—or walk away dramatically—to preserve our honor.”
I nodded. That sounded familiar.
“But real dignity,” he continued, “is not something others can touch. It is something you measure internally.”
He offered a different definition: “Your dignity,” he said, “is determined by how sincerely you live according to your principles.”
I frowned. “So, if someone insults me, and I respond calmly, that doesn’t reduce my self-respect?”
“Only if calmness violates your principles,” he replied. “If kindness, restraint, and fairness are your values, then abandoning them under pressure is what damages dignity.”
He gave an example from daily life.
“Imagine someone cuts you off in traffic,” he said. “One response is to shout, insult, chase. Another is to slow down and move on.”
“People would say the second person is weak,” I said.
“They might,” he agreed. “But the real question is: which response required more inner strength?” He explained that reacting impulsively often feels powerful in the moment, but it is usually the easiest option. Restraint, on the other hand, demands alignment with one’s values.
“Dignity,” he said, “is not loud.”
I challenged him. “What about standing up for yourself?”
He smiled. “Standing up for yourself does not mean standing down from your principles.” He described a workplace situation where a colleague spoke disrespectfully. Instead of responding with sarcasm or aggression, the person calmly said, “I’m willing to discuss this, but not in this tone.”
“No insults,” he said. “No submission either.”
“What happened?” I asked.
“The conversation changed,” he replied. “Because dignity creates boundaries without destroying character.”
He explained that many people confuse dignity with ego. “Ego needs to win,” he said. “Dignity needs to remain aligned.” Ego asks, How do I look right now? Dignity asks, Who am I becoming? “When you define self-respect by other people’s behavior,” he continued, “you hand them control over your character.”
That sentence landed heavily.
He told me about a man who always spoke politely, even when mocked. “People said he had no self-respect,” he said. “But when it mattered—when decisions were made, when trust was required—everyone turned to him.”
“Why?” I asked.
“Because consistency creates authority,” he replied. “Not aggression.”
He clarified that dignity does not mean passivity. “You can be firm,” he said. “You can say no. You can leave. You can set boundaries. But,” he added, “you do not abandon your principles to do so.” He paused and then continued. “If honesty, patience, and fairness are your values, then that is the standard by which you judge yourself—not by how loud or intimidating you appeared.”
As the conversation came to an end, I realized something unsettling.
Most of my so-called self-respect had been borrowed from reactions, from approval, from appearing strong in the eyes of others. True dignity, he had shown me, is quieter.
It is the ability to say, “I will not become less of who I am because you forgot who you are.”
And perhaps that is the deepest form of self-respect there is.


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