Friday, September 21, 2012

What Is More Important?

-         There is worship, and there is warship, and both belong to a soul…

The philosophy of materialism replies to the question of “What really matters in life?” with one answer, “Hedonism is the answer to every question that has satisfaction somewhere in the middle…” Such a philosophy declares to the entire world that mankind is a slave to his schemes of endlessly seeking for satisfaction. It openly confesses that he cannot save himself from the pleasure he indulges in or creates, nor can he redeem his soul from the influence of affluence; thus copying and pasting into our present times the timeless mentality theme of money being man’s main source of contentment – a driving force that keeps pushing him towards itself…
I don’t mind that money is important, because it is important. Money is special and important. I don’t question the power and potential it carries, because it is what it is – it has potential. And power. Even the Bible says so. Money has power – a power that increases with its accumulation; but a closer observation into the affairs of the present world – and the past ages too - forces us to understand (or misunderstand) the question of wealth (money), pleasure, intellectualism, meaning and satisfaction. The many things we may learn or might have learnt as life shoots before us may teach us (or might have taught us) facts on hedonism that have a broken tail and with no head in view; but if present, confused all through… The question of what I value most in my life today is wanting. I may not even know what I really want. Many accept and appreciate that without questioning. It is common nowadays. It seems normal not to know where I am coming from or where I am going to. I am excused not be sure of what really drives my life. I am allowed not even care to know. That is the life we experience in we people who live today – a life without meaning and direction – and we all seem so okayed with it; but eventually, we find out that life succumbs right before us and we sooner than later are drying and dying and diminishing and ending into frailty day by day, thanks to the lack of knowledge of what we are doing or why we are doing what we are doing.
Deeper within, the life fact is that something somewhere should more important than everything else in our lives, even if we can’t definitely speak out the to’s and fro’s of our deepest beings – even if it is so loudly unspoken… and that unspoken words speak loudest… - that very essence of such an existence screams so loud into our ears that we may end up being scared that it is us being addressed, thus destruct us from getting in touch with reality… Money haunts us most – the lack or presence of it. It haunts us most. Money loves us most – the pull and push of it. It is our conflict and our resolution. Somehow, every part of today’s world hovers around money. To get it. To have it. To use it. To maneuver through times with (and by) it. To just be moneyed… It may be true that the voiceless noises of poverty have killed our right view of how good money is or the search for it, and also deviated our optimism towards gaining it… Such a poor thing that makes people “rich”…
And schooling has just made it worse - meet a young man (or young woman in any case) and ask them why they go to school. They may (or may not) answer you back with the accent of superiority of learnedness to illiteracy. They may imply to you that it is constructive - and it is. We value education. It is good to be educated. Intellectualism has become our greatest ego booster. But neither education or shear intellectualism has the capacity to fill the vacuums created by lack of true knowledge and wisdom. They are only but fluff in the game of wisdom.
But get me right on this one. I am neither complaining (or hating) about education nor wealth nor pleasure; but about the vision thereof and the attitude compounded in such crimsons. I am not against intellectualism, because what you read here is a result of such strives. But I am just loudly wondering why we at all have to crown our educational abilities as the main source of a better status in life… I am just wondering why we should think that being educated makes us run into a “better” world… No wonder one Malcolm Muggeridge wrote and said, “We have educated ourselves into imbecility”. We live lives intertwined with philosophies. Philosophies of wealth and money. We live like philosophies. Philosophies of well-being and aptness. We think philosophies. We imagine philosophies. We create some and trash some, but always live many – empty philosophies. We are proud of intellectualism because education is a philosophy on its own – that which owns our minds and twists all rounds of our thinking. We were born into the present generation thinking of and knowing that education has all that we need for our future. We have become lazy in factualism and positive dialectics, but have adopted argument and “policy thinking” as our sources of what is right. Many of our lives somehow hang on one word or another breathed out of the mouths of gurus and nerds teaching us in the lone class of “respect-cum-honor bound fellas”.
Such lives as described above leave us with so many ‘if only’s’. We live in the ‘if-only’ era. An era that values words and thoughts of our own and of fellow men than those of a well intended source. We always will regret later. Yes we will. Our relationships are always held on the loose. Our relationship with God. And with fellow men. And with friends. And with our spouses. And with ourselves… they fade away slowly and we end up realizing that we can’t even meet ourselves anywhere – all at the expense of loving money and education. Broken relationships. Divorces. Emptiness. Broken selves. Forgotten selves. The price for highly regarding hedonism and intellectualism is quite expensive. Time has proved it thus. We will be heard crying, “If only I had known” or “If only I had done this or that…” We should not allow it to happen to us too late in the game of life, because those questions are always asked with a lot of bitterness in the heart and with fear and failure furiously staring us in the face… And we may never have the answers right then. We may never manage to deal with the reality of things…
I am not ashamed to confess that so many of us today can’t unblinkingly answer that question up there with confidence and without mentioning money or status somewhere between – just as the philosophy of materialism depicts. We tend to say, “My name is Bonface Morris Otunga, I studied (or study) bla bla bla, at bla bla bla with the likes of bla bla bla, I hold a bla bla bla in… I work at bla bla bla… I live at bla bla bla…” and the story is endless… That has inseparably become our definition of us. Titles. Names. Status. Power. Origin. Education. Ego. It has become who we are. They have become who we are. Right? Yeah, all those are cool. They should be there. They are meant to be there. But what carries most of the weight of our definition of us is who we remain to be to our families, friends, spouses (or boyfriend/girlfriend) and most important, to God. Having the titles and taking care of our relationships is what should be our goal- our ultimate goal. Striking the balance between all this is what determines how well we can define who we really are and what is really important to us; and if at all what we believe in is meaningful to all…
In Foundations of Achievement (A character development program by John E. Schrock), under the Management Principle of Debt, he writes and says, You cannot be happy by being independent. We were designed to be relational…” and C. S. Lewis once said, “Prosperity knits a man to the World. He feels that he is "finding his place in it," while really it is finding its place in him....
Two songs I do wish you would listen to:
“Identity” by Lecrae (ft. Da’ T.R.U.T.H. & JR) and “Fantasy” by Da’ T.R.U.T.H. (ft. JR)…
So once again, “What is really important… to you?”

Morris.

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