A Soul Defying, Tacit Approval Of Torture: How Did We Come To
This?
By Phil Rockstroh
10/04/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- - -For most of us, the price we would have to
pay for confronting authority would be far too prohibitive;
hence, we learn it is acceptable (as well as politically useful
to our power mad leaders) to displace our anger and fear upon
outsiders. Ergo, the so-called Clash of Civilizations is
unloosed and slouches, by way of the Washington Beltway, to
Iraq, Iran and beyond to be born.
"True sanity entails in one way or another the dissolution of
the normal ego, that False Self competently adjusted to our
alienated social reality ... and through this death a rebirth,
the ego now being the servant of the divine, no longer its
betrayer." —R. D. Laing
10/04/06 "ich" - --- The pathology of American culture is as
ubiquitous as its strip-mall ugliness. It is abundantly evident,
in almost every aspect of contemporary life. From the predatory
(to the point of psychopathic) practices of its morally scurvy
pirates at the helm of the corporate/governmental ship of state,
down to the pandemic enervation and proliferate anomie of its
galley slaves languishing in their soulless cubicles -- from the
genitalia-devoid mascots at Disney World to the
genitalia-obsessed torturers of Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo -- the
soul-sickness spreads before us like George W. Bush's taunting,
executioner's smirk.
Ronnie Laing's profound dictum leaves us confronting many
poignant questions regarding the true nature of the psychic
lives of us so-called ordinary citizens of The United States of
America and our ability to function within this corrupt and
crumbling empire. In short, is it sane to be able to adapt to an
insane culture?
Moreover, it begs the following question. If an individual’s
conformity to group, cultural, and national pathology is
rewarded -- thereby encouraging the formation of the "False
Self” -- how might one, stranded within the dysfunctional
dynamic, resist it all and begin to work towards an awareness of
their own essential nature, then perhaps arriving at an
individual reckoning involving how to live, flourish, and
subvert the life defying demands of the present era.
First off, what engenders the formation of the False Self? Laing
grasped: When we were children, authority, in the form of
parents, educators, clergy, loomed before us. Alternatively
menacing and comforting, these powerful figures could just as
easily have crushed us as comforted us.
Tragically, all too often, they perpetrated the primary. Hence,
to accommodate the overwhelming demands of authority, we learned
how to curry favor from these baffling, seemingly implacable
forces by the creation of a cipher persona, a False Self, a
tricky and/or obsequious, tap-dancing, little apple polisher,
who strives to garner approval and acceptance, thereby avoiding
punishment, rejection and scorn, by means of the reflexive
subjugation of his true nature.
The victims of False Self adaptation are the quintessence of the
corporate/consumer citizen. Although, they're presence is far
from benign: While they are compelled to show an agreeable face
towards unyielding authority, this trope merely serves to mask a
mind seething with misplaced resentments and shallow subterfuge.
Doesn’t this read like a personality profile of Condoleezza Rice
or any other member of that present day Executive Office cast of
Lord of the Flies known as the Bush administration?
This process of metaphysical identity theft begins in childhood.
Then, as now, the presence of individuality-decimating authority
can create irreconcilable anxieties within us, because the
actions and activities of authority figures seem as overwhelming
and unpredictable as nature itself.
Now add this to the already haunted landscape of childhood --
our present day government’s campaigns of perpetual fear
mongering, plus the dominate corporate culture's modus operandi
of commercial exploitation -- and we’re left with one freaked
out populace – one comprised of both children and alleged
adults.
Consequently, this fear-ridden existence has rendered us a
society of grotesques: In the present day United States,
children have grown as fat as steroid-fed, corporate-farmed
livestock; this has transpired because we overfeed them a diet
consisting of steroid-fed, corporate-farmed livestock -- as well
as – myriad other variations of nutrient-devoid, calorie-laden
faux food dispensed at a mall's food court, through a drive-thru
window, or out of a cardboard box delivered by a franchised junk
food chain.
Our motives for doing this shouldn’t be a mystery to us: We
habitually shovel high fat, high carbohydrate, high
sugar-content junk into their grousing gobs, in a desperate,
futile attempt to stuff down the boredom, the anxiety, the
lassitude they suffer due to their confinement inside the
commercially branded, repressed, empty, holographic facsimile of
childhood we have created for them.
This is the reason why our children overeat like neurotic
domestic pets. As is the case with housebound, bored, anxious
domestic animals, what do they have to look forward to -- but
dinner? Accordingly, the corporate food industry provides plenty
(at a bloated profit, of course) of junk food -- the table
scraps fallen from the table of the ruling elite of our fat-ass
empire – in order to keep them (and all the rest of us) obese,
obedient, and anxiously waiting by our master's table for more.
And these proto-fascist, behavioral control tricks are not just
for kids. Corporate Capitalism has left us Americans
psychologically arrested in a pathetic simulacrum of childhood
where our inchoate fears of being preyed upon by our (so called)
protectors (who we internally and accurately recognize as
monsters) are displaced into compulsive consumerism (including
overeating) and a reflexive fear of outsiders.
If we were to awaken to this subterfuge, we would apprehend: Our
individual uniqueness is being robbed from us on a daily basis
due to our enslavement to a mindless system that lives for no
other reason than it lives -- a system that eats its fatted
young (giving new meaning to the term consumer economy) -- and
exists only to perpetuate itself -- a system that has become a
soul-devouring monster -- the embodiment of Alan Ginsburg’s
Moloch.
Why do we accept this soul defying situation? For most of us,
the price we would have to pay for confronting authority would
be far too prohibitive; hence, we learn it is acceptable (as
well as politically useful to our power mad leaders) to displace
our anger and fear upon outsiders. Ergo, the so-called Clash of
Civilizations is unloosed and slouches, by way of the Washington
Beltway, to Iraq, Iran and beyond to be born.
This is the manner that we as a society came to believe we can
“compromise” on acts of torture committed in our name and not
fear the loss of our souls as a result of our complicity.
Although, the loss of our national soul would only prove
redundant: Years ago, we decided our souls, both individual and
national, were somewhat less than useful to us – and not nearly
as compelling as a new widescreen, plasma TV and the like --
hence they were discarded into the reeking landfills of this
toxic country like an old appliance.
These actions are what the corporate/military/consumer empire
demands of us: For it does not take long for us to learn which
aspects of our personalities are accepted and rewarded, and,
conversely, which ones will be punished and scorned. In essence,
the roles we’re expected to play in exchange for being loved,
fed, clothed, and sheltered.
This exchange insures us that we're given a "safe" place within
the community -- not cast out into the wilderness and fed to the
wolves. This fear is not an outrageous fantasy: It is, in fact,
a primal memory. Due to the fact, numerous forms of infanticide
were once common practices in nearly all cultures, including the
act of abandoning outcast children to die in the wilderness.
Moreover, this knowledge still lingers within our psyches, where
the memories of such terrors still howl just beyond the tree
line of our waking awareness, instilling within us the terror of
ridicule, of failure, of being ostracized. Far too many of us
succumb to these fears and begin playing the roles circumscribed
by their families, communities, and cultures. Tragically, their
true selves, for all practical purposes, were smothered in their
cribs.
In itself, the False Self, as well as other varieties of
habitual self-centeredness, is a variety of imprisonment. The
world is spread before the cell of the self, yet we prisoners
cannot leave the confines of our small, self-involved anxieties;
therein, mind, heart and imagination become atrophied by a lack
of experience, empathy and spontaneity. The bars of the cage
might be invisible, yet the sense of confinement is palpable
across our corporatized culture. Ergo, a collective numbness and
apathy levels upon the land – and ultimately our desensitization
to genocide and torture.
To begin to free oneself from the bondage of the False Self, one
must become aware of one’s own fraudulence. That being: the
awareness of one's desperate machinations before exploitive
authority.
Self-knowledge can provide us with a point of entry to the act
of empathy. Yes, even extending it towards one as loathsome as
George W. Bush. Years ago, the sorry ass son of a bitch put on a
mask (its contours, both menacing and ridiculous) in a vain
attempt to shield himself from being crushed by power. Imagine
having his parents: that soulless cipher of a father and
blood-freezing Medusa of a mother. Try to imagine the
psychological carnage involved. It’s the same trauma we
experience daily due to our own powerlessness against the
dictates of the corporate state and its threats, both implied
and overt, to cast us into the howling wilderness of financial
ruin, poverty, and homelessness.
(A caveat: The proffering empathy to Dick Cheney would be
pushing the parameters of empathy to the breaking point: Upon
being subjected to Cheney's glowering, reptilian aura, even
Mahatma Ghandi would be reaching for a pair of brass knuckles.)
Even in this fear-ridden era, there are some among us -- types
such as non-conformists, creative thinkers, and artists -- who
welcome (rather than cower before) the metaphorical wolves (that
are recognized, each to each, as fellow outcasts). Instead of
being eaten by the wolves, they are suckled and raised by them.
Nourished by their outsider status, the creative spirit thrives
when freed from the constraints of a mindless adherence to
groupthink. The dark terrain of societal abandonment becomes
their natural habitat: they howl at the moon; they reject the
daylight world of bland consensus; they learn to see in the
dark, apprehending their own interior darkness and, as a result,
gain an understanding into the hearts of darkness beating within
those in power.
The wilderness of political activism, of poetry, of art becomes
their home: they don't clean-up nicely for polite company; they
don't let themselves be bred down (as a few domesticated wolves
did) to yapping Toy Poodles, in exchange for a few food scraps.
Yes, when you’re looking at a Toy Poodle -- you're looking at a
former wolf, as when your looking at the corporate press corps,
you’re looking at folks whose ancestors long ago were
journalists.
One moment, you're loping through the woods, snout held high,
smelling the scent of fresh game on the wind, then the next
thing you know -- you're being led around on a leash and collar,
encrusted with tacky rhinestones and you're salivating at the
sound of an electric can-opener. One moment, you're a child,
entranced in play, hardwired to eternity -- the next thing you
know, you're sitting at work and your passions, hopes, and
yearnings have been shrunk down to Toy Poodle-sized agendas ...
You're truckling for your boss's approval; you're counting the
minutes until break time, when you can devour some junk food.
Like a domesticated pet, or an unfortunate animal incarcerated
in a zoo, you are no longer a noble animal – you’re a Thing That
Waits For Lunch.
To resist, we must cast off the fear of being an outcast. I
remain hopeful: There is yet a molecule or two of the wild wolf
left within us cringing, cloying Toy Poodles.
One must always remember this: We human beings are of nature
too. Accordingly, within us lies an indomitable self, encoded
with the grace and fury of the natural world, and, if
acknowledged and respected, it will awaken and arise. Then the
real dogfight begins: The fur will fly, as we fight, fang and
claw, to retake our own essential natures, and, by extension,
begin the struggle to restore health, imagination and empathy to
a nation of cage-accepting, torture-countenancing sick puppies.
Phil Rockstroh, a self-described, auto-didactic, gasbag
monologist, is a poet, lyricist and philosopher bard living in
New York City. He may be contacted at: philangie2000@yahoo.com.
Click on "comments" below to read or post comments
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.