Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Dover Beach

We have pitifully little time to achieve full moral maturity here. I wonder if anyone ever has, Shakespeare, maybe? In any case I would think that any such maturity would involve a full realization of our permanent disjointedness. A clever, grasping, amoral animal will forever remain a central part of us ( I can easily recognize that in my own being, the deep, dark impulse). While another part is attempting a strange pilgrimage towards a better home – and sometimes the landscape, the experience feels exhilarating, the cold and the beauty taking the breath away. But mostly not, mostly we muddle, don’t connect, don’t cohere - there will be no escape from that. This we must accept and go on living with the awareness that we would not choose to live so, given liberty to make the choice. Only in this world there won’t ever be such liberty.

Sometimes when I watch our carefree little boy I’m filled with huge dread: he could so easily be taken away from us – it’s a cruel, random world. The Christians believe that the universe is not so. There will never be no knowing, but all reason tells us otherwise. I wonder if anyone will ever truly be content with that understanding, with no self-deception or wishful thinking involved.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I would have agreed with you a few years ago. But not so now, I can feel a subtle, yet increasingly prominent change in people and the world. Take heart!

stockholm slender said...

Well, curiously enough I don't find this post overly bleak. I would not want to blunt this unique experience with self-deception and false comforts (like most interpretations of religion). To fully appreciate the prescious things we have here, we must admit their vulnerability. If we are lucky, we have hostages to fortune...