What is that we do when judge someone or something? We compare it to our experience and our understanding of what we know to be a truth or the perceived way of being. In so doing we display our ignorance and narrow view of things as they really are. We use the object of our judgement as a mirror to outwardly voice, mentally or verbally, our take on things as our opinion has shown it to be thus far. That is it. There is no weight to be attached to our judgement in terms of whether or not the object is in the wrong or otherwise. Merely that we are noticing how the object’s condition does not match our expectation. That is where the observation ought to perhaps end: the noticing of our conditioned viewpoint. To go any further with our judgement is to attempt to impose our experience of life onto that of the object, and therein lies arrogance, ignorance and selfishness. How wonderful that there exists within this experience a multitude of differing ways of being. Only through that variety do we get to see all possibility. When we attempt to impose our viewpoint onto others we harm ourselves in denying to us the beauty of choice in this world.