
Turning
Old Clichés into New Maxims:
Live For Today. If it Feels Good, Do It.
By Richard Eyre
Note: This column appears every two weeks … with
an old cliché replaced by a new maxim each time. Click
here to read the full introductory column. Click
here for an archive of previous columns.
It
was a business associate who used to tell me that this was
his motto. And in the context that he meant it, it had a
certain appeal and validity. He was committed to living
only in the present, enjoying the moment.
The
problem was he took it a step farther to where it meant,
“Don’t be bound by any convention or standard or even by
any consequence.” His goal was pleasure, which, by definition,
made him selfish.
Too
often in our society we are attracted to things that sound
new rather than old, individualistic rather than conforming,
and experimental and exciting rather than traditional and
time-tested.
The
problem is that many of us keep rediscovering an age-old
wheel of folly. We end up learning, by trial and error (and by pain) things that millions
of others have learned the same way and that philosophers,
sages, prophets, and God have told us all along.
*
There was an interesting incident in our ward, where
the bishop was a laborer by profession. He was sincere and
dedicated by was neither educated nor articulate. One of
the members in the same ward was a highly trained (and very
expensive) psychiatrist-therapist.
It so happened that several people from the ward were
going to both the bishop and the therapist for advice and
counseling. Some of them felt that they were getting more
help from the bishop, and they told the psychiatrist so.
He was a little professionally troubled by this, so he went
to the bishop and asked him was his secret was. What methods
or teachings or counseling or therapy did he use which were
so effective in helping people to improve their mental and emotional
health?
The bishop took the question very seriously and gave
a typically blunt answer: “Well, I just ask them questions until I figure out which commandment they are
breaking, and then I tell them to stop it.”
*
The
word commandment sounds so authoritative and restrictive
that we sometimes pull away and have the instinct to rebel,
to “do our own thing.” Yet scriptural commandments, for
those who believe, are best described as “loving council
from a wise father” ― profound advice from a Supreme
Being who wants us to be happy and has outlined the best
behavioral ways to be so.
The
simple fact is that there are absolutes. There are
universal values that qualify as such through the collective
human experience if not by their divine origin or source.
And living by those ageless standards does not threaten
or diminish our freedom, it expands it. There are
consequences for selfish, indulgent behavior, and the consequences
are usually in the form of limits ― limited
health, limited relationships, limited options and potential
― in short, limited freedom.
*
My
business associate’s philosophy of instant gratification,
living only for the present and doing whatever felt good
at the moment worked well on some very important things,
such as enjoying a pretty day or a current conversation
or on feeling grateful for an unexpected opportunity of
a serendipitous circumstance. But it worked terribly on
things from the very temporal (credit cards and financial
management) to the more spiritual (character, empathy and
conscience).
The
problem with his motto is that it pitted the enjoyment of
the present against the wisdom of the past and the
prudent planning of the future. It was a choice of the one
at the expense of the other two.
A Sanskrit poet saw things very differently. He believed
that the present should be well lived, but with both the
past and the future fully in mind: “Yesterday is but a dream
and tomorrow only a vision, but today, well lived, makes
every yesterday a dream of joy and every tomorrow a vision
of hope.”
People
who value the past, both for its memories and for the wisdom
its experience, tend to understand and appreciate the present
more and to have a clearer idea of where they want their
own future to go. And minds that spend some time focused
on the future usually have a clear enough sense of where
they are going that they can worry less about it and thus
enjoy the present more.
The
new maxim represents a paradigm that has always been important
― but never more so than today.
LIVE
IN THE PAST, THE PRESENT, AND THE FUTURE,
AND
DO THE RIGHT THING
In
the long run, this is what feels good.