Adrift
Fri, 01 Sep 2006 Filed in:
Journal
The more certainly we define
ourselves, the more we fear an unraveling of that knowledge in the
face of change and death. As I watched television today, I was
struck by how constantly two themes are reiterated: doom and
escape. We flirt with our fears, and then dream of keeping them
away through money, distance and association. There are programs
describing how wars might destroy us, or our failing energy
reserves, or the climate, or nature — or the slow decline of
creativity as we submit to technology. And all of these are
accompanied by heart-pounding music of the sort you might find in a
horror movie. The underlying theme is quite obvious: existence is
coming to get you. You’ve struck a claim of self-independence
against the vast improbability of time and space, and now your debt
is being called. Can you run fast enough to escape it? Those who
can run fastest and furthest — who gain popularity through
outstanding achievement, or who imprint their memory on the minds
of many — have seemed to cheat for a moment the gaping maw of
oblivion. But what’s really been achieved that time will not
ultimately scorn? What sort of numbers game can mankind hope to
play against Eternity? I’ve watched films like *Dead Poet’s
Society*, that make philosophies like *carpe deum* seem worth
following. (That is, those who make today their own are able to
defy the anonymity of their passing days). But even this film was
not truly about the present. It seemed to imply that the present
could be used to make a claim on the future: that what we do today
can have a significance beyond the moment. If so, it is just
another idea of escape. Time cannot be distracted, or bought, or
logically disproved. Can anyone reading this even recall what their
infancy was like? Or truly what their childhood was? Time has
swallowed parts of each of us already. Even if a thread of
continuity really remains, what we were does not. *There is no self
that can know itself through every stage*. The self who engages in
reflection is no longer the self of non-reflection. Then if
everything we write is erased, why write at all? I think
understanding this is everything. Otherwise, if there is too much
investment placed on the background and future of what we do, we
will end up spending most of our energy protecting what we believe
can be possessed. In fact, the belief of possession is best
evidenced through a need to protect, and thus *our fears themselves
are of the essence of establishing a sense of permanency in time*.
If we were never afraid, it might mean there was nothing
substantive enough to fear losing. The more we are sure of who we
are, the more daily life turns into a battle against entropy: a war
with the very days of our lives, each day spent arduously defining
something less durable than a mayfly. Yet it is the beauty of our
nature that we flit among the mystical planes, changing in
definition as rapidly as our thoughts. Like the quantum physics we
develop, to reflect upon our being is to change the nature of its
subject. A watch is named because it marks time, not because of
particular times it has or will show. I think an answer to the
rabid fear I see on television and in society must begin by letting
go. To acknowledge that physics has not described our universe;
that psychology has not explained the mind; that history has not
ever told us what really happened; that sociology cannot define
cultures. Whatever role these ideas play in our development, the
actual reality of the present moment is forever beyond
classification. It flirts with death. It is unstable, unsure, and
largely ignorant. We do not know what happiness is, or how to find
it. We are never sure of the meaning of life, or of our role in it.
The more certainly we attempt to describe these things to
ourselves, the more tightly we create our bonds of fear. And thus
conversely: the more powerless we know ourselves to be at
describing and knowing reality, the more we are ready to experience
and accept whatever it actually is. Yet even at the heart of such
impenetrable mysteries: this breeze is indescribably fine; these
words please me to write them; and a fine bed is waiting for
me.