Tag: reflective philosophy

  • Am I the Person I Think I Am—Or the Person Others See?

    Am I the Person I Think I Am—Or the Person Others See?

    Identity, Perception, and the Self Between Them

    Who am I?

    I may think of myself as quiet and thoughtful,
    yet someone else may see me as cold or distant.

    I may believe I am kind,
    while another person remembers me as calculating or indifferent.

    We often assume that we know ourselves better than anyone else.

    And yet, the versions of “us” that exist in other people’s minds
    can feel strangely unfamiliar.

    So we begin with a difficult question:

    Am I the person I believe myself to be—
    or the person others perceive?

    1. Is the Self I Know Truly Real?

    person reflecting on inner self

    We spend much of our lives thinking about ourselves—our personality, our strengths, our weaknesses, and the kind of person we believe we are.

    But even this inner self-image may not be entirely objective.

    Psychologists describe a tendency called self-enhancement
    the human habit of seeing oneself in a more favorable or comfortable way.

    In other words,
    the “self” we know may partly be
    the self we wish to be.

    This raises an unsettling possibility:

    Perhaps the person I know as “me”
    is not pure reality,
    but an interpretation shaped by desire, memory, and emotion.

    2. Is the Self Others See More Objective?

    identity shaped by social perception

    Other people often judge us through fragments—our tone of voice, our expressions, our silences, and our behavior in certain moments.

    Sometimes their interpretations are accurate.
    Sometimes they completely misunderstand us.

    A person who enjoys solitude may be seen as lonely.
    A thoughtful silence may appear uncaring.
    Calmness may be mistaken for emotional distance.

    The gaze of others acts like a mirror.

    But mirrors can distort.

    The self others perceive may contain truth,
    yet it can never contain the whole truth.

    3. Identity Is Created Between Inner and Outer Selves

    Sociologist Charles Horton Cooley described this process as the looking-glass self.

    According to Cooley,
    we develop our identity partly through imagining how others see us.

    In this sense, identity is never formed alone.

    The self emerges through interaction, interpretation, and reflection.

    Yet this does not mean our inner world disappears.

    Rather,
    the tension between the self we feel internally
    and the self reflected by others
    becomes the very space where identity grows.

    We discover ourselves not through certainty,
    but through negotiation.

    4. The Self Is Not Fixed—It Is Ongoing

    Modern philosophy and psychology increasingly view identity
    not as a fixed essence,
    but as something constantly shaped and reshaped.

    We are different with friends than with strangers.
    Different at work than at home.
    Different in memory than in the present moment.

    This does not necessarily make us fake.

    It may simply mean that the self is relational—
    a living dialogue between who we are,
    who we think we are,
    and who others believe us to be.

    Conclusion: I Am Both Myself and More Than Myself

    identity forming between self and others

    I am the person I feel myself to be.

    And I am also the person reflected in the minds of others.

    Neither version alone is complete.

    Identity exists somewhere between inner experience and external perception.

    That is why we should be careful
    not to define ourselves too rigidly—
    or judge others too quickly.

    The self is not a finished object.

    It is something continuously unfolding.

    And perhaps maturity begins
    when we accept that we are never seen completely,
    even by ourselves.


    A Question for Readers

    Have you ever realized that the person others see is very different from the person you believe yourself to be?

    Related Reading

    Our sense of self is often shaped not only by who we are, but by how we compare ourselves to others.
    In Am I Falling Behind? — How Comparison Distorts Our Sense of Time, social comparison reveals how identity, insecurity, and perception influence the way we understand ourselves.

    At the same time, the self is deeply connected to emotion and inner interpretation.
    In Are Emotions a Barrier to Moral Judgment—or Its Foundation?, the relationship between emotion and reason shows how feelings shape not only our decisions, but also the way we construct our personal identity.


    References

    1. Cooley, C. H. (1902). Human Nature and the Social Order. Scribner’s.
      → Cooley introduced the concept of the looking-glass self, explaining how identity develops through our perception of how others see us.
    2. Mead, G. H. (1934). Mind, Self, and Society. University of Chicago Press.
      → Mead argues that the self is socially constructed through interaction and communication with others, especially through the idea of the “generalized other.”
    3. Goffman, E. (1959). The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Anchor Books.
      → Goffman compares social life to theatrical performance, suggesting that identity is continuously shaped through roles and social situations.
    4. Gallagher, S. (2000). Philosophical conceptions of the self: Implications for cognitive science. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 4(1), 14–21.
      → Gallagher distinguishes between the minimal self and the narrative self, emphasizing how identity develops through lived experience and storytelling.
    5. Taylor, C. (1989). Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity. Harvard University Press.
      → Taylor explores how modern identity is shaped through moral, cultural, and relational contexts rather than existing as an isolated inner essence.
  • Has the Past Really Passed?

    Has the Past Really Passed?

    Memory, Emotion, and the Time That Still Lives Within Us

    A song you have not heard in years suddenly plays on the radio.

    A familiar scent passes by.

    A street, a face, a fragment of light—
    and for a moment, time returns.

    You thought that moment was gone.

    But suddenly, the feeling, the expression, the atmosphere of that time stands beside you again.

    The past seems distant on the calendar,
    yet strangely alive within you.

    So we begin with a quiet question:

    Has the past really passed?

    old music bringing back memories

    1. We Feel Safe When Time Moves Forward

    We usually understand time as a straight line.

    Past → present → future.

    This order helps us feel that life is moving forward.
    It tells us that what has passed should be left behind, and what lies ahead should be faced.

    We often say:

    “That is in the past.”
    “Move on.”
    “Look forward.”

    But perhaps this belief also protects us.

    If the past has truly passed, then pain can become distant.
    Regret can lose its power.
    Loss can become something we survived.

    Yet human experience is rarely that simple.

    The past may disappear from the calendar,
    but not always from the heart.

    2. Memory Brings Time Back Into the Present

    We return to the past many times a day.

    Through a photograph.
    Through someone’s voice.
    Through a place we did not expect to remember.

    Psychologists often describe memory not as playback,
    but as reconstruction.

    Memory is not a perfect recording stored in the mind.
    It is rebuilt each time we recall it.

    The person we are now reshapes the past we remember.

    This means that the past is never simply “behind” us.
    It continues to live inside the present, changing its meaning as we change.

    3. Emotion Does Not Follow the Calendar

    time frozen inside emotion

    Some wounds still hurt years later.

    A person may speak about something that happened long ago
    and suddenly cry as if it happened yesterday.

    Why?

    Because emotion does not obey chronological time.

    A memory may be old,
    but the feeling attached to it can remain immediate.

    In this sense, some moments do not pass completely.
    They remain suspended within us, waiting to be awakened.

    When a song brings back a lost season of life,
    it is not only memory returning.

    It is time becoming emotional again.

    4. The Past Is Not a Place We Leave Completely

    To say that the past remains alive does not mean we must live trapped inside it.

    There is a difference between being imprisoned by the past
    and carrying it with care.

    Some memories need distance.
    Some need forgiveness.
    Some need to be retold until they become less painful.

    But none of them vanish completely.

    They become part of the inner structure of who we are.

    The past shapes our fears, our hopes, our tenderness,
    and even the way we love.

    Conclusion: Time Flows on the Calendar, but Not Always in the Heart

    The past has passed in one sense.

    Dates move forward.
    Years accumulate.
    Life continues.

    But inside the human heart, time does not always move in a straight line.

    It returns.
    It trembles.
    It speaks again.

    Perhaps maturity is not about forgetting the past,
    but learning how to live with the time that still remains within us.

    The past is not simply gone.

    It is one of the quiet forces
    that continues to make us who we are.

    A Question for Readers

    Have you ever felt that a memory from long ago was suddenly alive again in the present?

    Related Reading

    The past often returns not only through memory, but through the pressure of comparison and the feeling that time is moving differently for everyone.
    In Am I Falling Behind? — How Comparison Distorts Our Sense of Time, the emotional experience of time reveals how memory, anxiety, and identity shape the way we experience the present.

    At the same time, memory is deeply connected to emotion and moral meaning.
    In Are Emotions a Barrier to Moral Judgment—or Its Foundation?, the relationship between emotion and human judgment shows why certain moments remain emotionally alive long after they are supposed to be “past.”

    References

    1. Bergson, H. (1910). Time and Free Will: An Essay on the Immediate Data of Consciousness. George Allen & Unwin.
      → Bergson distinguishes physical time from lived duration, showing how inner time can remain fluid and emotionally present rather than simply chronological.
    2. Heidegger, M. (1927/1962). Being and Time. Harper & Row.
      → Heidegger understands time not merely as sequence, but as part of how human beings experience existence, memory, and meaning.
    3. Ricoeur, P. (1984). Time and Narrative, Vol. 1. University of Chicago Press.
      → Ricoeur explains how humans organize time through narrative, suggesting that the past continues to live through the stories we tell about ourselves.
    4. Tulving, E. (1985). Memory and consciousness. Canadian Psychology, 26(1), 1–12.
      → Tulving’s work on episodic memory shows how remembering allows us to mentally travel through time and experience the past as part of present consciousness.
    5. Casey, E. S. (2000). Remembering: A Phenomenological Study. Indiana University Press.
      → Casey explores memory as an embodied and emotional experience, emphasizing how places, sensations, and feelings can bring the past back into the present.