Van Gogh Self Portrait

Van Gogh. Self Por­trait as an Artist. 1888

Look. Really look. And lis­ten. So few of us do. Which is a bit of a con­tra­dic­tion, and per­haps even a para­dox, given the fact that we so often are very much self-​​involved and self-​​centered. But we don’t see the Self. We don’t hear it. Or its multiplicity.

I think the aggres­sive ones, the finan­cial win­ners, the polit­i­cal and social élite, rush head­long toward their goals, most with­out know­ing who is behind that rush, behind the desires. They do so self­ishly, crush­ing many in their way. But they don’t see them­selves doing it. Strangely enough. If they bother to jus­tify it, they do so with­out thought, quickly, angrily, self-​​righteously.

Humans are most likely the only beings that are self­ishly unaware. Because we live out­side and against nature now, we don’t run on instinct alone. Instinct alone pre­vents true self­ish­ness. It also pre­vents true gen­eros­ity. We have the capac­ity for both, but mostly choose one over the other.

A spe­cial kind of self­ish­ness or obliv­i­ous­ness is needed, at times, to cre­ate. No must be said. A lot. No. I can’t do that right now. No. Leave me alone! That, of course, is prob­lem­atic. But a far worse form, a far more treach­er­ous form of self­ish­ness and obliv­i­ous­ness is … obvi­ously … when it’s not in the ser­vice of cre­ation, but destruc­tion. Some might argue that their destruc­tion is cre­ative. I would argue that they aren’t fool­ing any­one who sees. Really sees.

Many things can bring us out of self­ish­ness and obliv­i­ous­ness. And, another para­dox, many of these things help us see and know our­selves. Focus­ing on the Self can obscure it. Let­ting it go can open it up to the light. Dis­cov­er­ing it, means let­ting it slip away long enough to cre­ate your jour­ney back. All sages know this. Most of us never take their advice:

 

Do you know what makes the prison dis­ap­pear? Every deep, gen­uine affec­tion. Being friends, being broth­ers, lov­ing, that is what opens the prison, with supreme power, by some magic force. With­out these one stays dead. But when­ever affec­tion is revived, there life revives.

– Vin­cent Van Gogh

 

This is never sim­ple or easy. There is always a price to be paid for the jour­ney and the search. Other sages have told us that no good deed goes unpun­ished. Per­haps the Bud­dha is say­ing as much with shadows:

 

We are formed and molded by our thoughts. Those whose minds are shaped by self­less thoughts give joy when they speak or act. Joy fol­lows them like a shadow that never leaves them.

– The Buddha

 

I wish to live in a world of height­ened con­trast. I don’t wish to live in a flat world. Same­ness. Bor­ing same­ness. Bor­ing copies of copies. But I wouldn’t mind a bit more weight tossed on one side of the Great Bal­ance, the side that favors good deeds over bad.

 

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