Built Not Born.
I grew up in a home where certain things were just wrong, not illegal, not punishable by any court, it was just wrong, and I didn't need anyone to explain the law to me to know that, It was in how my parents spoke, what my faith said, what my community expected, what I had seen with my own eyes, All of that sat inside me and became the thing I measured my choices against, that is my moral threshold, and yours probably looks nothing like mine.

That's the part people don't talk about enough, morality is not a fixed line that every human being is born knowing. It's built, slowly, from a hundred different directions at once.
Your religion tells you what is sacred and what is a sin, your culture tells you what is acceptable and what brings you shame, and your family shows you, sometimes without even meaning to.
what love looks like and what it does not, your environment teaches you what survival requires, and then your own experiences the things that happen to you personally, the pain, the growth, the moments that shift something inside you those layer on top of everything else and make the picture uniquely yours.
All of it adds up. All of it counts, and this is why two people can look at the exact same situation and walk away with completely different feelings about it, one person sees a choice and says that's fine, it is not hurting anyone, another person sees the same choice and feels something in their gut pull back from it, neither of them is necessarily wrong, they are just operating from different thresholds built by different lives.
But here is the thing I keep coming back to, just because something isn't illegal doesn't make it right, the law is the bare minimum, It is society agreeing on what is bad enough to be punishable, it is not a complete guide to how a human being should live, there are things fully within the law that I would never do because my moral compass the one built from everything I just described says no, and that compass is mine, I earned it through my upbringing, my faith, my failures, my growth.
The danger is when people start treating legality as the only standard. When the question stops being "is this right" and becomes "can I get away with it", That's when morality starts to collapse,Because a society full of people only doing what the law demands and nothing more is not a moral society, It is just a managed one, now, freedom. Freedom is beautiful but it lives inside a context, your freedom to act is always in conversation with your moral threshold, a person with a strong internal compass doesn't need external rules for every situation, They already know, and that knowing comes from everything that shaped them.
The goal isn't to have the most permissive moral threshold or the strictest one, the goal is to actually have one, to know where you stand and why, to be able to look at your choices and honestly say this reflects the person I am trying to be, Not the person the law is forcing you to be.
The person you actually chose....
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STOP"morality is not a fixed line that every human being is born knowing."
I completely agree with this statement.. there's a thin line between right and wrong, and knowing when you cross that line or are about to cross it is basically what morality is.
Exactly.
Thanks for your comment.
That's just the basic truth, morality is built and majorly the kind of upbringing we have while growingup has a great influence on our morality and this eventually has an impact on our moral threshold.
Truth dear, it is built indeed.
A thoughtful and well-explained post. Thanks for sharing your perspective!
Thanks for stopping by
I grew up in such a home too. The fact that it is not illegal like you said also doesn't mean it is not wrong. And all of those things (culture, family l, religion...) contributes to our moral understanding.
Thanks for sharing such an amazing piece.
What you see your parents do can shape your morals during your upbringing.