As I pulled into a parking place at Walmart Monday evening, I could hear crying and screaming. A woman and her two children were at the van next to me. The youngest child was crying at the top of her lungs. The other child was yelling. The mom was screaming back.
I immediately didn’t like her.
“Get in the car and stop screaming,” she screamed at one child. “No, you’re not getting that. Just get in there and shut up, both of you.”
I sat in my car for a moment, silently judging her for being out of control and screaming at her kids.
As I got out of the car and looked over at the woman, I saw someone who looked exhausted, angry and stressed. She didn’t seem like a bad person. She just seemed like someone who was overwhelmed and snapped at her children because she had reached the end of her rope.
There’s a part of me that has a whole bundle of pre-made judgments for someone in such a situation. Her children are out of control because she hasn’t taught them how to behave. She should know better than to yell at them like that. She should act like the adult. She should be in control.
The list goes on and on.

Archived audio of my Alaska radio interview available for download
If we disrespect skilled trades, we’re ignorant and arrogant fools
Unconscious programming makes us eager to believe our own lies
Emotions such as fear, anger cause distraction, make focus difficult
Nelson Mandela overcame anger at oppression to become a hero
Legislator trying to legalize medical pot because of sister’s suffering
Ohio high school shooting shouldn’t be excuse to take more guns away
What does it take to hold thug with a badge accountable for murder?
How terrified would your child self have been of your current adult life?