- I am unique just like everyone else
- I am unique just like everyone else
- I am unique just like everyone else
- I am unique just like everyone else
- I am unique just like everyone else
There are many voices in the world today calling us to embrace diversity, to seek diversity even. But how do we begin to so much as tolerate diversity when uniformity is our primary means of self-defense? If I wear the same clothing style as everyone else in my peer group, I can fit in. If I can make my body size conform to a certain arbitrary standard, people will stop making fun of me or I’ll feel as though I’ve finally obtained some level of control over my life. If I just wasn’t so weird, so eccentric, so different, so unique (insert audible sigh here), then the pain would go away and I might be able to find a seat at the table. Diversity isn’t just a race thing or a gender thing or an age thing; it’s a people thing. The sense of security we think we’ll obtain once we’re finally able to squeeze ourselves into a cookie-cutter mold isn’t safe at all; it’s a prison. And I, for one, don’t want to spend the rest of my life in a straightjacket of homogeneity. I want to be free to love and to live fully as myself. And, if love is actually my goal, if I want to truly love my neighbor as myself, I need to start by loving myself, not in spite of my differences but because of them.