Based on ancestry, culture, judgment, belief, and experiences, all people are different. This means that everyone is an outsider to something because people aren’t carbon copies of each other. These differences let us have our own ideas and opinions, which lets us be outsiders. The important thing is that we don’t let these differences define us. The experience of being an outsider is universal because all people are physically different, mentally different, and emotionally different.
First, people have different appearances. We can thank ethnicity, heritage, and genetic coding for this. There are over 600 ethnic groups in the world, which shows that there is much diversity and difference in people. Ethnicity also gives people a sense of belonging because they belong to a group of people that share the same cultural background and experiences as them. People’s appearances, especially their faces, are their identity. Because of this, our appearances shouldn’t make us outcasts because all people look different. UC Berkeley’s article on their study of human genetics
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The frontal lobe of our brain allows us to think, plan, remember, and judge everything in our lives. Because of the frontal lobe’s functions, we all have our own ideas and opinions. There will most likely be at least one person on the earth that agrees with another person’s ideas and opinions, which means that they are always an “insider” to that group of people. Now, you might think, “What if there is no one else on the earth that has the same opinion or idea as them?” While a person might understand that that would make them an outsider to that point of thinking, that wouldn’t make them an outsider to everything. Just because someone is an outsider to one thing doesn’t mean that they are defined as an “outsider” or “outcast.” We know for a fact that people have different beliefs because there are over 4,000 religions or belief systems in the world