
Photo: Kevin Snow on Unsplash
I recently read a book by a man who has learned some of life’s hardest lessons and, by his own account, is still learning them every day.
He is not an evangelist. He is not selling salvation. He is not offering a miracle cure for what ails us. The lessons he shares come from his own life—one very different from mine. Perhaps that is why they resonated with me. They are not abstract or theoretical, nor do they arrive as a sudden revelation from above.
They are practical. They are human. And they are demanding.
They ask a simple question that is not simple at all: What does it mean to stand for something when standing costs you something?
That question stayed with me. It made me look in the mirror—not just to see who I am, but to ask who I still want to become. One lesson that stayed with me the most concerned community.
Not community as a slogan used by politicians to sound warm and decent. Real community. The kind that asks something of us.
Too many of us are isolated now. We are connected to screens and disconnected from each other. Social media gives us the illusion of community, but too often it leaves us angrier, more frustrated, more suspicious, and especially more alone.
That may feel like conviction. But it is not community.
We know we need exercise. We know we need to eat the right foods and take care of our health. But we do not always admit that we need community just as much. We need connection. We need belonging. We need people who know us, challenge us, forgive us, and remind us that we are part of something larger than ourselves.
That is not just a personal need. It is an ethical one.
Ethics does not live only in codes of conduct, mission statements, or speeches about values. It lives in relationships. It lives in how we treat the person who has nothing to offer us. It lives in whether we listen before we judge. It lives in whether we can still see the humanity of someone who frustrates us, or disagrees with us.
Community matters because ethics is not something we practice alone in the privacy of our own good intentions. Ethics is tested when belonging is hard, when patience runs out, when anger feels justified, and when exclusion seems easier than understanding.
One of the book’s most important lessons is that community does not heal us by drawing harder lines around who belongs and who does not. It heals by helping us build stronger bridges to one another. Not because every difference disappears. Not because every disagreement can be neatly resolved. But because a decent society depends on the willingness to remain in moral relationship with people beyond our own circle.
That does not mean abandoning standards. It does not mean pretending right and wrong are the same. It does not mean tolerating cruelty, dishonesty, or injustice in the name of politeness. Community is not the absence of judgment. It is the refusal to make judgment the end of the story.
The ethical question is not simply, “Am I right?” Sometimes we are right. Sometimes the facts are clear. Sometimes the line must be drawn. But even then, another question remains: “What kind of person am I becoming in the way I respond?”
That is why the lesson matters. Community is not sentiment. It is not nostalgia. It is not some soft alternative to ethics. It is where ethics becomes real.
The book is called Stand, and its author is Senator Cory Booker. But what stayed with me was not the office he holds. What stayed with me was the challenge at the heart of the book: to stand for something without standing apart from everyone else.
Because in the end, character is not measured by what we claim to believe. It is measured by how we live with other people. And if we are serious about becoming better people, building a better country, then we cannot begin by building higher walls around ourselves. We have to begin by building stronger bridges.
The opportunity to grow our community is within our power.












