M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E
The Subtlety of the
Deception
By Richard Eyre
Publisher's note: Perhaps the three most pursued and coveted things in our modern world are control, ownership, and independence. In Richard Eyre's mind, they are the three deceivers — and are ultimately both unobtainable and undesirable. They are, Eyre believes, the "false gods" that separate us from Heavenly Father and rob us of the things of the spirit. This column, exploring the obsessions we have developed with “CO&I,” and later outlining a better and more spiritual alternative for each, will open you to a new world of thinking that may change how you live. Richard welcomes your feedback and inputs. Write to him at Richard@meridianmagazine.com . If you missed any of the four earlier columns in this series, you can go to the Deceivers Archive and catch up. Introduction, and Thanks for the Inputs
Let me start this week by saying that I am
excited about the community of readers and responders this column is developing.
Each week, your letters and feedback roll in, and much of it is very enlightening
stuff!
When I first asked for your guesses as to what the Three Alternatives
(to the Three Deceivers of Control, Ownership and Independence —
CO&I) should be, I was overwhelmed with both the quantity and the
quality of the response. Keep it up! As your own ideas develop concerning
what the Three Alternatives (the gospel-centered paradigms or attitudes
that draw us closer to the Spirit and that can replace the Three Deceivers
that lead us away), continue to send them to me. In the meantime, I will
continue to develop the case against the Three Deceivers, because I continue
to believe that we must rid ourselves of them, break our addiction to
them and overcome our obsession with them, before we will be ready to
make the switch to their alternatives.
Last week we focused on how easy it is to
be tricked and led toward CO&I by appearances and media and false
paradigms. Now it's time to look at some habits or thoughtless patterns
we fall into which allow the three deceivers to take hold of us. These
are subtle, gradual things — they grow and take hold like all addictions,
a little bit at a time. To understand it, we need to probe three "Hows":
Let’s take a deeper look at each of
those three Hows.
The Race
"The Jonses have one, so we should have
one." "We have to have the second income so we can have the
second home." "If we want our kids to get in the right college,
we have to have the right private school." "I need a better
palm pilot and more planning so I can get more control of my life."
"Joe has so much more independence than I do. He goes where he wants
when he wants. I'm too dependent on other people and have too many people
who are dependent on me."
Getting there faster, doing more, controlling more, having more, and constantly
comparing ourselves with those around us has become a way of life for
most people. When did life become such a contest, such a race? We ought
to remember what Thoreau said:
If a man fails to keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him move to the beat he hears, no matter how measured or far away.
And we ought to remember what e.e. cummings
said: "More, more, more, more. What are we anyway, morticians?"
Part of the problem is that we live so close to each other, and comparing
is so easy. Another part of the problem is that we are surrounded by media
that are always making comparisons for us and setting up the "ideal"
that we are all expected to aspire to and follow. To repeat the quote
from last week, "Like our ancestors, we observe our neighbors through
a rectangular, glass window. The difference is that we turn our glass
window on and off with a remote."
We slip subtly into the race for control, ownership, and independence,
running along with everyone else. As we run faster and faster, we see
less along the way. Is it really a race we want to be in? And are the
"rewards" of control, ownership and independence really the
prizes we want to keep?
Or do we want to consciously drop out of that race, and seek our happiness
in other places?
Mirrors and Windows
The old circus mirrors made us laugh because
they distorted everything. Today’ windows, though — windows
of fashion and of self-image and of trying to reflect what the world seems
to want us to be — can be equally distorting.
Even worse than old wavy glass or circus mirrors is when our windows start
turning into mirrors, and we lose our ability to see others and their
needs. If our windows become coated with the silver of selfishness and
self-absorption, we begin to see only into them and not through them.
We see others only in terms of how they can help us, or how they will
affect our image, or how they will fit into our plans, or as reflections
of what we have more of (or less of) than someone else. CO&I are all
about ourselves — all about mirrors.
Anais Nin said "We do not see the world as it is, we see it as we
are." Or, I might add, we see it as we wish it were or as we wish
we were. We think we want more control, more ownership, and more independence,
and we fit everything into that model, including other people.
Happiness comes from seeing the world around us, and the people in it,
as they really are — seeing through windows instead of into mirrors,
being aware of the needs and feelings of others, accepting them as they
are and not comparing ourselves to them, and having true perspective about
the things that really matter.
Getting Distracted from our True Goals
On clear days when we have clear perspective,
we all know what really matters. We know that our relationships, our families,
our health, our character, and our growth as human beings and as children
of God are the things that count. We even know, when our spirits are clear,
that we control very little and God controls all — that ownership
is an illusion and that God owns all, and that independence is not the
ideal — but interdependence with each other and dependence on God.
The problem is that these clear moments don't come often enough. We live
in a world of clamor and activity and impressions from media and from
peers and society that all tell us we need to control more, to own more,
and to be more independent and self-sufficient — and that we must
compete and compare on the basis of the false ideals of the world.
Beyond being false and deceiving objectives, the paradigms of the world
block our vision and our perception of the real goals and take our attention
away from enjoying all the gifts that God has given, away from noticing
and helping those in need, away from developing our faith and our character.
Before we can succeed with clear re-defining of the happiness (and the
objectives) we seek, we must rid ourselves of the false perspectives and
the rat race mentality that we absorb from the world. This column will,
steadily and progressively, week by week, help us to do so.
And as we try to run away from CO&I, we must also be asking ourselves
what we are running toward. What are the Three Alternatives?
To take a guess on what The Three Alternatives are, or to express your ideas or feedback, write to Richard@meridianmagazine.com. As you make your own search for the Three Alternative, or as you send them in to me, remember that they must preserve all of the good aspects of CO&I (initiative, discipline, and so on) but eliminate all of the negative aspects (judgment, jealousy, conceit, presumption, envy, covetousness, and other deceiving and damaging qualities). The three Alternatives must draw us closer to God rather than distancing us from Him.
© 2007 Meridian Magazine. All Rights Reserved.