molecule of kindness<\/a>. The reasons for these more affectionate names is because oxytocin makes us love more, cuddle more, and it makes us kind. It is one of our oldest genes, at around 500 million years young.<\/p>\nWhat does this tell us? It tells us that the gene is highly important otherwise it will have phased out a long time ago. It causes mothers to love and care for their children, thus ensuring that they grow up and are able to reproduce themselves, thus carrying on the human species. It also causes us to help each other, to work together for a common good. The oxytocin gene truly is a kindness gene.<\/p>\n
So rather than being selfish, kindness is genetically \u2018wired\u2019 in us. Our kind nature is deeply entrenched in us. It is ancient.<\/p>\n
So what about selfishness and all of the unkind things we hear about and experience? These things don\u2019t mean we\u2019re not kind, only that life happens. How a person behaves is often a product of learning, or their circumstances or even their early background in life.<\/p>\n
A person whose life is comfortable might find it easy to be kind to others partly because life is uncomplicated by stress. Someone else who is having a really difficult time might out of necessity be more focused on survival or just getting through the current phase of their life. At times they might make decisions based on their own immediate needs rather than those of someone else. Person 1 might be regarded as kind and person 2 more selfish. Yet given the same set of stress-less circumstances they will both most likely be kind.<\/p>\n
The point is that deviations away from kind behaviour are not necessarily because of a selfish nature but because of circumstances. Although some people undoubtedly do have a more selfish nature.<\/p>\n
It\u2019s difficult to argue with that. But how much of this is their true nature and how much is a product of learning and experience? I don\u2019t have the answer to that as each of us is unique. But undoubtedly there is a full spectrum of natural kindness.<\/p>\n
Each gene comes in slightly different versions. If you imagine the oxytocin gene to be coloured pink then we\u2019d find that it comes in many different shades of pink, from light pink all the way to a dark pink that is almost red. Some have the lighter shade, some the darker. If we think of the gene\u2019s lightness of colour as generally associated with tendency to be kind, then we would find that some people are more naturally kind than others and therefore some people are more naturally selfish than others.<\/p>\n
But the point is that we ALL have the oxytocin gene. There is no one alive who doesn\u2019t have it. If a person didn\u2019t have an oxytocin gene they wouldn\u2019t be alive, which I suppose is quite an odd thing to say but I think you get my point. Oxytocin plays a crucial role not just in reproduction but throughout the cardiovascular system, the immune system, the digestive system, the process of making stem cells into muscle cells, heart cells, even skin cells. Without oxytocin, we quite simply would not be here. Now read this another way \u2013 without kindness, we quite simply would not be here.<\/p>\n
The 1976 book, \u2018The Selfish Gene\u2019, written by Richard Dawkins wasn\u2019t about humans being selfish. I think many have generally misunderstood its title. In some ways, the selfish gene has actually produced a kind species. Evolution has wired in us the tendency to be kind.<\/p>\n
It is kindness, not conflict or exclusion, that is the answer to society\u2019s problems. Where there is misunderstanding, we need empathy. Where there is hurt and suffering, we need compassion. Where the opportunities present themselves, we need to be kind. We are wired to solve our problems through empathy, understanding, dialogue, sharing, and finding common ground.<\/p>\n
Kindness elevates the human spirit. Kindness opens the heart and mind and helps us see the same things in new ways. That\u2019s it\u2019s power.<\/p>\n
If you\u2019re ever in doubt about which way to turn, about what to do, about what choice to make, choose kindness. It is your nature, after all.<\/p>\n
Further reading<\/strong><\/p>\nYou might like to read about the Born This Way Foundation<\/a>, which is all about helping to create a kinder, more compassionate world. They have declared 2017 to be A Year of Kindness.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"\u201cMy religion is Kindness\u201d HH The Dalai Lama You\u2019ve probably heard of \u2018The Selfish Gene\u2019. Many have mistakenly taken this to mean than humans are naturally selfish. That\u2019s not what the term \u2018selfish gene\u2019 refers to. Selfish gene really refers to the process of evolution where genes are copied and passed onto the next generation.…<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":2777,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[34],"tags":[77,19,10,11,49,26,33,82],"yoast_head":"\n
Born to be kind - David R Hamilton PHD<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n