A practice of witnessing and recording human behavior with curiosity rather than moral verdict.
Murasaki Shikibu observes her world with remarkable neutrality—she records courtly intrigue, vanity, passion, and cruelty without heavy-handed moralizing. She notices without condemning, which paradoxically deepens moral insight. For journalists and creative non-fiction writers, this practice means cultivating the ability to watch human behavior carefully while suspending immediate judgment. This doesn't mean abandoning ethics; it means gaining understanding first. By describing what you see with precision before assigning meaning, you honor your subjects' complexity and allow readers to form their own moral conclusions. Observation without judgment requires tremendous discipline—your own biases constantly want to intrude. But when you achieve it, your writing gains authority. Readers trust a narrator who seems genuinely curious rather than predetermined in their conclusions. This approach is especially valuable when covering difficult subjects or people you disagree with. By observing fully before judging, you reveal character and motive more convincingly than through accusation. The practice transforms journalism from advocacy into understanding, which is sometimes the most powerful form of witness.
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