My mind, it seems, reels every day, still trying to
come to grips with critical moral questions.
There will be no final, satisfying answers. In a sense it is healthy to maintain an
active, engaged state of cerebration. But
progress in awareness is possible, which can bring many psychological and
practical benefits. In the end, all we
can do is speak our thoughts, whether or not others decide to listen, or even
hear.
I want to reflect on some of the struggle’s basic
aspects. We’re born into conditions we
can’t control, and are greatly molded before we reach adulthood. This can lead to psychic and physical
scars. It can create belief systems and
behavior patterns almost immune to major modification. Someone raised fanatic Christian might well
stay fanatic Christian. Someone sexually
abused might never be able to accept open intimacy. And so on.
With enough education, maybe, and enough luck and
help, maybe, we start to break free. Aside from the family dynamic, many levels
of culture mold us. These, too, can
cripple, and require consciousness-raising to gain insight. Feminist consciousness-raising (seeing how a nation,
community, family, media, etc. fosters sexist unequal treatment in forms
subtle, not-so-subtle, and fully violent) is paradigmatic of the struggle to
achieve a higher, more ethical state of mind.
Of course, alongside sexism occurs racism. Biases toward gays/lesbians, and so on. Dealing with all these prejudice mechanisms is
a multilayered journey.
To recap the above: we’re born into circumstances we didn’t
choose and only through terrible psychological and intellectual struggle can we
(maybe) break out of patterns that keep us subservient to the norms of power. These norms of power enforce biases that
favor a select, elite class above others.
Racial segregation in the South is a stinging, stark reminder of willful
ignorance by the dominant whites.
By willful ignorance I mean egregious and horrific
wrongdoing, whether or not the dominant class ever consciously considers that the subordinated class is equal. There’s conscious suppression of the truth; and
there’s also repression (into the subconscious, where it can’t be accessed) of
the truth. Both are despicable. Utterly.
So, once you start to break out, find some modicum
of mental freedom, you’re looking from outside at a blanket-system of mind
control, one that locks a huge number of people--scores of millions in the
USA--into a state of subjective, anti-ethical blindness. If you challenge them with obvious truths,
you are (a) not heard, (b) lack legitimacy, (c) are sick, (d) need to be
isolated and ostracized. If you somehow get
someone to ‘argue’ with you, they will say something like, “It’s just human
nature, there’s nothing to be done about it.”
Saying something like the following can turn you
into a pariah in many circles of power: “women
are raped and often blamed for the rape instead of the male perpetrator; and this
indicates a major problem in our society.”
To recap again:
you struggle to (hopefully) emerge in a space where you can see the
grand dysfunction of the social world.
At this point, you are wiser and more aware. But, still, it sucks to be you. It’s painful, it’s depressing, and your
journey of awareness continues--always continues--as you peel back more layers
of cultural programming and your own biases.
In my own case, this has gone on for decades. And somehow I have to look
back and not hate myself for my previous level of ignorance--and for continuing
to do certain things even though they are wrong, such as eating the meat of
factory-farmed animals or buying things that were made by de facto slaves in
China.
This is what life is like if you strive to ‘Know
Thyself’, the motto written near the Oracle of Delphi. It sucks, it really does, but it’s
imperative.
At some point in this struggle, you get a
comprehensive picture that includes: sexism, racism, homophobia (etc.)--and
also, what I haven’t touched on yet--depraved and unjustifiable wars that draw
on hate-mongering and race-baiting; and also terrible environmental
destruction. I don’t want to use the
word “rape” lightly. But the Earth
indeed has been raped by human greed. As
ecofeminists assert, there's a cultural, conceptual link between Earth being
dominated and women being dominated.
Scientists have pointed out that (a) we humans are
committing the planet’s sixth cataclysmic extinction, (b) we humans have pushed
global warming past a point of no return.
Add to this the ugliness of ‘development’ across the globe (rectilinear grids, whether urban or agriculture) and all the pollution and
trash. So, yes, we’ve raped the
planet. It’s as sick and twisted as men
raping women.
Amazingly (at least to me--still--after all these
years) a lot of people just shrug in both cases.
You get the “human nature” line, or more likely, “you’re
crazy, you’re the sick one.”
I'm sick of people calling me sick because I point out obvious injustice and scientifically verified phenomena.
I'm sick of people calling me sick because I point out obvious injustice and scientifically verified phenomena.
Humans have lived with injustice forever. But our time is even worse. Why?
Because we overburden the Earth, are pushing the entire planet toward collapse, even as we stockpile more ‘efficient’ weapons and point them at each
others' countries.
So, to recap again: your reward if you (somehow) manage to open
your mind is pain. You get to watch the
over-heating, shrinking life raft of Earth run out of supplies and head toward a cliff. Meanwhile the passengers point guns at each
other and act as if males are superior to women, whites over blacks, heteros over gays. Etc.
Just the probability that animals such as elephants,
apes, and rhinos will be gone soon--that alone is monumentally sad. Add on all the other sorrow from above. Add on the many others I haven’t the grip to
mention.
When people asked me why I look tired, I ought to
just refer them to this blog entry. I
truly believe I am going to die much sooner because of my awareness. Still, I wouldn’t give up my awareness, even
to live an extra thirty years. Denial is
great for longevity, at least in the Baby Boomer generation.
As I touched on above, my own journey has involved breakdowns
and personal milestones. I’ve taught in
colleges since I was a graduate student, back in the 1980’s, and I’ve reliably
pushed for greater awareness in my students.
I’ve published 900 poems and some stories, many of them subtle or
not-so-subtle indictments. I’m working
on a novel that I intend as my magnum opus, my great statement.
I keep fighting and going. But it’s despicable what we have done--and I’m
speaking primarily to those who will not read a blog entry like this, or anything that speaks to oppression and environmental wreckage--those still in
denial. I know, Who’s perfect? I wish I was.
But I’m not a creature composed of pure energy and light. I beat myself up because I’m not. Really. But... BUT--
In the end, we have to keep trying and speaking
out for more awareness and more justice; and those who say we have no right to
speak because we ourselves are flawed, they are just wrong.
We need to encourage our own individual awareness
and also our collective human awareness.
Heck, once a culture gets pushed far enough, it starts to set individuals
in the right direction. Few people, if
any, in America are challenging women’s right to vote. This was a very controversial topic just a
hundred years ago, and indeed back then women couldn't vote.
Yay, some victories.
And yet, from another perspective, people act so shallow. Act. That doesn’t mean they are. That’s the essence of the great
tragedy that has already arrived. And
it will keep arriving, getting worse and worse.
You’ll see.
Or you won’t. It's the basic,
critical choice.
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