Why are we so quick to judge others? Why do we form opinions with so little information, sometimes without knowing anything at all about the truth of a situation? In both small matters and major life events, the careless words of others can cause real harm. A single judgment, tossed out casually, can stain reputations, strain relationships, and deepen wounds that were already difficult to carry. Too often, we dislike someone, or what we assume they’ve done, based not on facts, but on gossip, assumptions, and half-truths. It is dangerous, it is reckless, and it raises the question: why do we indulge in it? Is it boredom? A false sense of superiority? Do we mistake judgment for wisdom? Or do we simply find it easier to speak about the flaws of others than to confront our own struggles?
Living in a small town, I have seen the best and worst of close-knit community life. There is comfort in how everyone knows each other, but also danger in how quickly “knowing” becomes assuming. Yet even in cities, where anonymity should offer distance, judgment finds its way. A neighbourhood develops a reputation, a co-worker becomes the subject of speculation, or questions linger about how funds were spent after a fundraiser. The settings may change, but the tendency remains: people fill in the blanks of what they don’t know with assumptions, and assumptions quickly harden into judgments.
It doesn’t take much to spark irritation in our daily lives. A co-worker’s habits, a neighbour’s choices, or even the weather (too hot, too cold, too wet, too dry) all can push us toward frustration. While weather passes, opinions often don’t. They stick. Petty annoyances fester into grudges. One bad encounter can define how we see a person forever, even if, deep down, the “reason” doesn’t hold up. The truth is, we often cling to these irritations, because it gives us something to hold onto, a way to explain our own discomfort.
When hardship enters the picture, judgment spreads like wildfire. Whether it’s in a community, a workplace, or the circle of friends you gather with on a weekend, news of someone’s difficulties travels quickly. “Well, I heard…” becomes the opening line to a story we don’t really own, and may not even be true. Suddenly, we act as though we are experts in the lives of others. We forget that words have weight. We forget that repeating what “everyone else is saying” does not make it true.
There are, of course, times when speaking up is a moral obligation. If someone vulnerable is being harmed and cannot defend themselves, silence can be complicity. In so many other situations, it truly is none of our business. If it is none of our business, then we have no right to insert ourselves into the narrative of someone else’s life. If we do, what do we really have to gain?
What has also faded from much of our culture is the practice of giving people the benefit of the doubt. Instead of assuming the worst, what if we paused to ask, “I wonder if John is doing okay?” rather than declaring, “I heard John is in trouble”? That small shift in language reflects a much larger shift in mindset—from judgment to compassion.
Before we speak, we would all do well to remember three simple questions: Is it true? Is it necessary? Is it kind? If the answer to any of those is no, then perhaps silence is the greater wisdom.
Resisting the urge to judge does not mean ignoring wrongs or silencing our voices when it matters. It means recognizing the difference between standing up for what is right and tearing others down out of habit, envy, or idle chatter.
At the end of the day, judgment is easy. Thoughtfulness takes effort, but if we are willing to choose the harder path, when we pause, reflect, and weigh our words, we might not only spare others from unnecessary harm, but also bring a little more grace and understanding into our own lives.