Tag Archives: society

Remembrance & Compassion on 9-11

It’s hard to imagine anyone living in the United States who doesn’t know thattoday is the 10th anniversary of 9-11. September 11, 2001 is etched in our collective consciousness as few other events in American history have been. One would be hard-pressed to count the number of remembrance events taking place today; from grand, civic events like New York City’s to small, more intimate services in churches, synagogues, & temples, (and–yes–mosques), today will be a day for mourning the nearly 3,000 lives lost on that day. This is right and good. It is important to take time to recall those lives, and how those loses touched us all. These are things that unite people into a community, be it large or small.

On this day, it is also important to remember the families and friends of those who died. Our sadness over those deaths is and should remain the source of compassion that we feel for those whose pain of loss will never go away.

It may be argued that today should be strictly for remembering those who died ten years ago or were immediately touched by those deaths. Unfortunately, compassion–once felt–has a tendency to expand, reaching out to others who suffer.

This day should serve, too, to remind us of the lives lost and families that suffer as a result of 9-11. The first responders who spent days and weeks in the toxic ruins of the Twin Towers carried the devastation in their bodies and minds, and many of them died as a result of their dedicated service. Many more struggle with the after-effects, their suffering exacerbated by cruel bureaucracies & politicians who have denied them the health care they deserve.

The events ten years ago also propelled our country into two wars-of-choice. As of this morning, just over 7500 American servicemen and women have died in Afghanistan and Iraq, more than twice those who died on 9-11. They, too, have families for whom the pain of loss will not end. Of the hundreds of thousands of others who were sent off to those conflicts, tens of thousands returned home wounded in body and mind. They, and the families who care for them, should be remembered on this day, too.

The ripples of suffering for ten years have expanded even beyond America as a result of the wars, to include millions of people of in Afghanistan, Pakistan, & Iraq whose lives have been forever shaken through death, the collapse of society, displacement, and mental & physical trauma. By some estimates, between 1 & 1-1/2 million Iraqis have died, and tens of thousands of Afghanis & Pakastanis, as a direct result of American (and British, and NATO) policies post-9-11. Just as those murdered on 9-11, the vast majority of these people did nothing deserving of death. They should be remembered as well.

We do no dishonor to those who died on that Tuesday ten years ago when we recall those who have suffered and died subsequently if our remembrances inspire a spirit of compassion in us both as individuals and as a people. We are at our best when we feel and act on compassion towards others. It matters little whether those others are close to home or far away.

More thoughts on Spirituality

Last night I wrote a short piece as part of my summer psych course in which I wondered how a person who does not come from a position of social & economic privilege achieves the stage of development that Abraham Maslow termed “self-actualization.” I re-posted that piece here, in case anyone’s interested; what gave rise to my questioning was that so many of the narratives about people who have achieved self-actualization–or grace, or enlightenment, or transcendence, or whatever term one chooses–are about people who have come from some degree of privilege already. It seems that many of these people have the time, the resources, or at least the education to start them along their paths. There’s nothing wrong with this, and it takes nothing away from the achievements of these individuals (many of whom we rightly consider saints). However, do those who start from a different place follow similar paths, or do they reach self-actualization/grace/enlightenment/transcendence differently?

What we need are multiple narratives, multiple examples of women & men from different classes, ethnicities, faith traditions, economic circumstances–from all the complex elements of the modern social fabric–to reach a richer understanding of not only how individuals have lived their lives in ways that helped them achieve a deep understanding of the world, but also why they set out on and stayed with their journeys.

Within my own Catholic tradition, we have many such stories of people who have been called “saints.” These stories are treasures, and there are many, many examples of people from modest or even desperate circumstances who have achieved grace. Unfortunately, so many stories have become hagiographies in the worst sense of the word, elevating the individual to super-human status. We see them as somehow not quite human, not quite like us. We too often focus on their achievements and not the processes whereby they achieved. We fail to learn what they have to teach us–either by example or by their own words–about how they went about the process of living life rightly.

There is something of a spiritual revival going on. In 2004, Time Magazine reported that some 15 million Americans meditate; undoubtedly that’s increased. Also, by some accounts, an equal number practice yoga (though I imagine a significant portion of those pay less attention to the spiritual aspects than the physical). What is changing is not so much that people are more or less religious, it’s that religion is relevant to them only to the extent that it encourages, teaches, & supports spiritual development. For good or ill, if a faith tradition doesn’t deliver, people will look elsewhere.

The implications, I think, are huge. What will happen if 25 or 30% of Americans seriously practice a spiritual discipline? What will happen if 75-100 million Americans come to see others as their sisters & brothers and not simply objects to be ignored or exploited? What will happen when the desire to consume & possess is replaced by compassion? I can’t think of any spiritual tradition that doesn’t have, at it’s core, the awareness of the inter-connectedness of all things, the centrality of love in the universe, and the importance of living compassionately. It staggers the mind to think of such a “velvet revolution.”

It ultimately matters little, I feel, what path a person follows to achieve a state of self-actualization/grace/enlightenment/transcendence. In fact, I’m not sure that we need to be overly concerned with the achievement but rather the journey. That said, I think that all the great faith traditions, including Catholicism, have to become better teachers than administrators. We have many examples, and we have rich wisdom to draw upon. It’s our collective responsibility to both practice, learn, and share with others. Truly, the stakes are very high.

Self-Actualization and privilege

[The following was a posting for a psychology course I'm taking this summer.]

From the time I was first exposed to Maslow years ago, I’ve always held his theory of self-actualization being the goal of human development close, both professionally and personally. At the least, it acknowledges what so many people intuit, that life has more to do with meaning than existence. But even more, the goal of self-actualization (using his term) is both practical and achievable for individuals rather than something only available to ascetics living in mountain caves.

But what I find myself wondering about is the processes by which an individual can strive for self-actualization. I well understand that his hierarchy of needs is a description and not a prescription, that a person moves up & down the pyramid many times in her or his life. Drawing on my own experiences, particularly having come into adulthood through a working-class background, I wonder how an individual for whom the lower strata of physiological and safety needs are still salient can move further towards self-actualization. Maslow’s theory seems to imply that one must move up the pyramid sequentially, but is this in fact always the case? Yes, we can easily imagine that a person who is thirsty, hungry, in need of shelter, under threat, etc. can’t be expected to keep his or her mind on achieving transendence. But we all have the image of the above-mentioned ascetic for whom physiological & safety needs are no longer a concern; we assume that that person has overcome & surpassed their influence through some process to the point where even food, water, and air are minor factors in their lives. How does a person transcend those in the real world?

I’ve been reading two books lately: Paramahansa Yogananda’s Autobiography of a Yogi and Dorothy Day, by Robert Coles. Both of these saints’ extraordinary lives are inspiring, but I’m also aware that both begin their lives with their physiological, safety, and belonging needs largely met. In fact, it seems to me that the majority of narratives of the lives of those who achieve some degree of stabilized transcendent state are those of people who begin from a place of privilege. Taking nothing away from the struggles of their personal journeys, their early lives permitted them a degree of freedom to pursue self-actualization (again, to use Maslow’s term) that many others don’t have.

My interest here is largely practical. What examples do we have of individuals whose lives are more precarious, who grow up without many material & intellectual resources, but who still achieve the degree of self-actualization/transcendence/enlightenment of those who start from more privileged positions? Is it possible to overcome the power of those lower needs without having to first secure them? And given those examples, what generalizations can be made about the process by which a person transcends privation & want without first working to gain those material resources with which others begin? If this can be articulated, then it seems more likely that self-actualization can be shown as a realistic goal to all and not just the few.

[Just a final note: I firmly believe that there are many examples of people who transcend want to achieve profound states of consciousness. One has only to visit places where basic needs are in short supply to see these people. What I’ve had difficulty finding are the narratives and studies, at least to the extent to which we find those of individuals from more privileged backgrounds.]

My Prayer on July 4th

Dear Lord, bless America on this, its birthday:

Bless the men and women who have served in uniform to defend her, especially those who were required to fight in wars, whether just or unjust;

Bless the women and men who have struggled to prevent war, especially those who have stood against the will of their government and the majority of their fellow-citizens;

Bless the families who have lost loved ones, especially those who grieve in face of violent, unnecessary, and unjust loss;

Bless the men and women who have worked to restore the lives of those affected by conflict, disaster, and personal trauma, especially those who have labored in the aftermath of our country’s actions or inactions;

Bless the women and men who serve our communities, especially those who are willing to sacrifice their lives or reputations for the common good;

Bless the men and women who give of their own free time to help others, especially those who have little free time to begin with;

Bless the women and men who go to work every day to provide decent lives for their families, especially those whose work is undervalued, underpaid, or threatened;

Bless the men and women who give generously to those who have less, especially those who sacrifice from their ordinary incomes rather from their surplus wealth;

Bless the women & men who are unemployed, especially those who have become discouraged and no longer look for work;

Bless the men and women who teach in our schools, especially those who feel overworked, demoralized, or attacked;

Bless the men and women of all religions who work to realize your will on earth, especially those who speak your word with fearless and prophetic voices;

Bless those women and men without religion or faith who nevertheless strive to bring about a just and moral world, especially those who work hand-in-hand with people of faith;

Bless our children, who are the hope of our future.

In the words of St Francis, Lord, make America an instrument of your peace;

Where there is hatred, let America and Americans sow love;

Where there is injury, pardon;

Where there is doubt, faith;

Where there is despair, hope;

Where there is darkness, light;

Where there is sadness, joy.

O Divine Master, Grant that America and Americans may not seek…

To be consoled as to console;

To be understood as to understand;

To be loved as to love.

For, as you have taught us…

It is in giving that we will receive,

It is in pardoning that we will be pardoned,

And it is by dying to the ways of pride, selfishness, and injustice that we will be reborn to the promise that is “America.”

Amen.

Deconstructing The Green Lantern

One of the pleasures of summer is to not only have the time to do things like go to the movies but also the time to think. Yesterday Anne, Mary & I saw The Green Lantern; it was a fun diversion for a warm, humid Sunday afternoon. As a movie, I would have to give it 3-4 stars (out of 5). The plot was somewhat formulaic & predictable; but the writing was otherwise good enough, and the actors accomplished enough, to keep it one’s interest going. I would recommend seeing it–for fun. But this is not going to be a movie review.

As we were waiting for the movie to begin, I found myself thinking about the spate of superhero movies over the past several years. It has long been argued that we tell ourselves stories about superheroes during times of uncertainty, unrest, or dramatic social change. The argument goes that people need reassurance that their world is an orderly place, where truth & justice will triumph in the end, where a few special individuals will rise above the norm to restore order & defeat the forces of chaos & destruction. The appearance of Superman (1938) and Batman (1939) after ten years of Depression and on the brink of another World War are held up as classic examples of the theory. In a capricious & mutable world, these characters and their exploits provided not simply escape but the reinforcement or reaffirmations of beliefs and values. Certainly the superheroes of the War years–Captain America, Wonder Woman, The Green Lantern, The Flash, et al–were obvious responses to those dark times. But my point here is not to cover territory that others with more knowledge & talent have already discussed (Wikipedia articles on Superhero and Superhero Fiction are as good a place to start as any, but Michael Chabon’s The Amazing Adventures of Cavalier and Clay gives an excellent, Pulitzer-Prize-winning overview of the topic). Rather, I wanted to look at the society that is giving new life to this venerable genre.

Hal Jordan, the protagonist of the story(-ies), is a Top-Gun-style test pilot. The Hal Jordan test pilot character goes back to the 1958 rebirth of The Green Lantern (the original Green Lantern was a train engineer), a time when test pilots really were superheroes, so the character is not an Everyman by any means. The movie tries to soften this a little in making Jordan’s pre-Lantern personal life a mess: at one point he admits to his young nephew that he is irresponsible & negligent (although he can really fly). Still, Jordan possesses extraordinary qualities from the start, which already raises him above the mortal sphere.

I find it interesting that most superheroes are, at their core, “super.” Of course, there are those who are by nature “others,” insofar as their pedigrees are  extraterrestial (e.g. Superman), divine (e.g. Thor), or mythical super-human (Wonder Woman, Aquaman). But those who begin life as humans already have, generally speaking, personal qualities that set them apart: Jordan is a test pilot, Bruce Wayne/Batman is exceptionally rich, Brit Reid/The Green Hornet is a wealthy newspaper publisher, Tony Stark/Ironman is a billionaire industrialist & engineering genius, Bruce Banner/The Incredible Hulk is a brilliant physicist, and so on. The inborn “super”-ness of mortal superheroes leads to a couple of conclusions that seem to speak volumes about contemporary life. [Note: There are a few notable exceptions, such as Spiderman, Captain America, The Daredevil, etc.; perhaps I will devote another posting to discussing these deviations from the superhero norm.]

Given the above argument that superheroes speak to anxieties that people experience when their society is unstable, their futures uncertain, their values challenged, it follows that “ordinary people” experience some degree of powerlessness. Moreover, the mechanisms by which people feel empowered have been undermined, eroded, or destroyed altogether. We know that society is not working for us “ordinary” folk. We also know that those for whom it is working live lives wholly different from our own–politicians, the upper echelons of business-people, celebrities, professional athletes, and so on. Even if we do not see these people as villains, we are still conscious of the fact that “they ain’t like us.” If, however, we do see as malign either the successful people or the society that separates us from them, then clearly the person-in-the-street does not have much hope of success, even if success means simply keeping what one has. Only someone with “super” abilities can stand up to the super-villains who have corrupted our world. We need saviors.

Basic to the struggle between the superhero and his or her nemesis is what Tom Wolfe discussed in The Right Stuff as the lone-warrior-in-single-combat motif. Even if we stretch a super-villain into a metaphor for some aspect of modern life–Parallax, Hal Jordan’s/The Green Lantern’s adversary, gains his power by feeding on fear, so it could be argued that he represents the fears & anxieties that define late-industrial, capitalist society–we are prevented from seeing the superhero as a representation of modern humanity by his or her super nature. The superhero is and always will be an “other.” It is the superhero, the lone warrior, who battles for humanity against forces that mere mortals cannot resist.  Collective action is laughably useless: at best hopeless martyrdom, at worst ignominious destruction. Our role is to run or/and die.

The superhero genre is at once conservative and liberal, at least in the more sociological definitions of those words. Because superheroes battle against nemeses that seek to tear down society–literally or figuratively–they struggle to preserve the common good. In a world where individuals feel helpless–be it the fictional world of superheroes & super-villains or the real-life world of depressed economies, wars, political corruption, and corporate greed–we want to feel reassured that those values and beliefs upon which we have built our lives can be successfully defended against the scoundrels who attack them. We want things to be the way they were (even if “the way things were” was not really all that great to begin with). Superheroes are not revolutionaries.

In the same sense, superheroes reinforce liberal beliefs. Liberalism, as it has been understood in this country since the 19th century, holds that one’s society can be improved through thoughtful, systematic change. Sometimes such changes can be unpleasant, even drastic (e.g. “The New Deal,” “The Great Society”), but liberalism does not believe that the fundamental system is itself at fault. The superhero, again, is not a revolutionary. His or her role is to mitigate and rectify the damage to society inflicted by those forces too powerful for the collective action of ordinary people. The superhero will change things, through his honesty and her sense of justice, but he or she will not change things too much. Only villains do that.

It is probably obvious where I am going with this train of thought. Superheroes and superhero fiction entertain us, but they also disempower us in subtle ways. Although they are born out of the fear and anxiety we feel as a result of all the pressures put upon us in and by contemporary society, they also take away the idea that ordinary people like us can stand against the forces, the super-villains, that create those fears and anxieties. We are the damsels in distress awaiting our white knights. Moreover, that white knight is not going to change the system that imperils us in the first place; he is simply going to remove the peril and restore what was. And await the next peril, of course.

In disempowering the common person, the superhero motif points to a very real danger: believing that this politician or that businessperson, this religious leader or that self-help guru can correct our problems and restore order to our world. On both individual and social levels, entrusting our futures to others has generally proven to be unwise. Literal superheroes are fictions, and figurative superheroes are by definition rare (how else can they be “super”?). Our world is not threatened by intergalactic monsters, nor by evil geniuses in subterranean lairs. Rather, our threats are of a much more mundane nature, though not necessarily any less destructive. Such threats do not require superheroes. These dangers can be met & overcome through the principled actions of individuals, acting collectively.

People like me want very much to see fundamental, systemic changes in our society. But, you know, I would be happy with simply tackling the worst problems for the time being.

Yes, yes, I know: superheroes and super-villains are works of the imagination and should be enjoyed as such. Hey, I was English major, and I teach literature (and film), so I both know and embrace the argument. I enjoyed The Green Lantern, as I have enjoyed the Superman, Batman, Spiderman, Ironman, Megamind, Kung Fu Panda and all the other movies starring superheroes. They are fun. But their entertainment values should not dissuade us from looking through the genre, through the motifs, to see the very real world from which they spring. And having seen that world, we cannot sit and passively await for a superhero to show up & make things right.