@Nadene Canning I love words, yet we must remember, people hold different meanings for a word. We could be saying the same 'word', yet they will always hold incomplete 'perfect match' of meaning in another person's understanding. That said, for me 'integrity' means 'wholeness', 'completeness' or 'put together'. It's when you're actions match your belief and words within yourself. The tricky things about integrity and ethics as you described it, as in being 'right', different people value 'right' differently. Living into the values of others reminds me of the parable "The Man, the Boy, and the Donkey". (Written below) Two things I take from your comment: 1. If you're authentic or in integrity, don't be a jerk. Or put in the affirmative act for the well-being of others—ALWAYS. 2. When we look at others' 'integrity', assume positive intent as they may hold different values. Or better yet, judge not. Yet be in integrity with yourself so much so, you can stand blameless in your actions within yourself, even if others judge you from their different value system. <story start>An old man and his young son set out for market with their donkey, planning to sell it. - They start walking alongside the donkey. Passers-by scoff: "What fools! Why do they have a donkey if not to ride it?" - So the man puts the boy on the donkey's back. Soon people criticize: "Look at that disrespectful child riding while his poor old father walks!" - Embarrassed, the man swaps places — now he rides while the boy walks. Others shake their heads: "What a shame! That strong man rides while the tired little boy trudges along." - Feeling pressured again, the man decides they should both ride the donkey. People immediately complain: "How cruel! They're overloading that poor animal — they'll break its back!" - Finally, in total frustration and trying to satisfy every critic, they get off, tie the donkey's legs together, find a pole, and carry the donkey on their shoulders like a trophy.