If I am fundamentally open (susceptible, vulnerable, unavoidably responsive) to others, then some unmeasurable part of me will never be transparent to me or truly under my control: I’ll never fully understand myself or fully will the things I do. But this opacity within myself is also a ground from which I can grow an ethics: we are fundamentally made of each other, we are relational beings, and our responsibility to each other arises from this fundamental interconnection—our responsibility to tell a truth that admits that as much as I do know about myself, I can never be fully aware of my own formation (and continuous reformation as a living, responsive member of the world). Because you also share this condition, I am obligated to extend this admission to how I think about you and others. This forms the basis, among other things, of a capacity to forgive.
I’ve been struggling to lead this consideration directly to a prompt, so I’ll start wtih the scatter of directions my thoughts are moving.
—I see _____ in you. (Fill in the blanks as a litany form. The observer registering zones of a person’s presence that are askew or counter to their primary presentation of personality);
—the principle of responsibility to each other articulated above is the same impulse that forms an ethos that rejects revenge (turn the other cheek, love thy neighbor);
—when I went back to the pages addressed to responsibility in the Butler source, I found this:
“ethics requires us to risk ourselves … our willingness to become undone in relation to others constitutes our chance of becoming human. To be undone by another is a primary necessity, an anguish, to be sure, but also a chance—to be addressed, claimed, bound to what is not me, but also to be moved, to be prompted to act, to address myself elsewhere, to vacate the self-sufficient “I” as a kind of possession.”
—Thinking about the stasis implied in a refusal to be “undone”—someone who couldn’t be undone would be a kind of fortress; to be undone in relation to them—their non-response, their lack of reciprocal undoing—would be humiliating… I was thinking of humiliation as a kind of stranding or isolation where there should be relation and mutuality;
—being undone akin to being unsettled. An “anguish” but also the only real chance of a future. (Closing off/boarding up the walls as an ossification, a living death.)
So:
Conjure a figure in mind, their presence registered as a push or pull on another.
Write a future for your figure in a short piece that combines portrait and text.