Thursday, January 29, 2015

Justice, Thoughts 1-30-15

I’m writing this in a state of extreme fatigue.  As such, there are likely to be numerous grammatical errors and non-sequiturs.  Still, I’m writing from an impassioned state, and that’s gotta be worth something, right?

For a very long time the concept of justice has been hanging heavily on my mind.  I’ve strived to see some reason, to understand why it is we as a society are so obsessed with it, but have always fallen short on some ground or another.  Justice, to me, seems obsessed with retribution; now perhaps that’s thanks to the “justice” the american legal system administers (it likely is, at least to some degree), but I’ve still been unable to separate the two — justice, it seems, ubiquitously is a means for enacting only partially qualified revenge.

Revenge is perhaps a more easily assailable concept.  In it there exists some element of blindness and coldness, for revenge, if pursued in direct proportion to the wrong, requires (to be considered fair) that the wrongdoer’s circumstance and motive was plain — that they willfully enacted some malicious event for which there were no ulterior motives or explanations than the wronging itself, a rather comical and incredulous circumstance.  No things are so plain, however hotly our emotions burn for the punishment of our miscreants.  

Perhaps this position is wrought of naiveté or an inability to cope with the things being of a different vein, but I wholeheartedly believe that people — that life in general — are/is essentially good.  It’s not the nature of the universe to do evil, and manifestations of what we perceive as evil are rarely that.  They are, instead, the result of the complex interactions between, ideologies, moral systems, physical needs, and psychological needs.  Interactions that, given the right (read wrong) circumstance, allow for any person to behave in an ‘evil’ or ‘malicious’ way.  

It is because of that exact vulnerability, the ability for anyone or anything given a malignant environment to embody some form of evil, that I believe the only just reaction is one of responsive forgiveness.  Rather than chastising or a person or forfeiting a chunk of their life to stagnancy, there should be systems with a goal of addressing and treating the issues that lead to a criminal act rather than the retributory (and ineffective) system that we currently adopt.  

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Jan 6th, 2015

I’ve been reading a number of german works in the past few months, spanning in era from 18th to 20th century.  One theme that I’ve found common in nearly all the works is the stark splitting of emotion and reason.  Its presence is so ubiquitous I’ve begun to grow curious of just how common it is in german art.  I am, however, not keenly enough interested in german culture to pursue it with much vigor.  Instead, I’ve found myself deeply drawn to these metaphors and fictitious scenes in which a person finds themselves lost in a psychological purgatory between feeling and reason, spirituality and rationality.

There is a balance I once believed we must create between the two — a compromise.  As a child it takes the form of narrowing the imagination’s scope, seeing what is impossible and what is possible, then readily and correctly differentiating between the two.  This can be evidenced by a fear of monsters or night, darkness gives rise to ambiguous shapes, things that a child cannot yet readily dismiss as imaginary or impossible.  In our teens we learn to distinguish a valid feeling from an invalid one, and how to properly show the ‘right one’ while veiling the ‘wrong one’.  Again, this manifests as strange emotionality, crying or feeling rage over what is typically written off as something trivial.  Now into our twenties and generally considered an adult, one wrangles with a lingering sense of idealism.  They attempt to reconcile what they want to do with what they think they should do.

All of these stages I’ve described are of course of a person slowing carving themselves deeper towards the side of reason/rationality.  This is not always the case — there are, on rare occasions, those who seem to be born seemingly outside of this realm.  However, I’ve chosen to focus here on the path most people take, where we repeatedly dismiss the emotional and spiritual side of ourselves because of both habit, and belief that the two are incompatible.

There is, for a reason I’m unable to defend, a sense that all things spiritual are also irrational.  Perhaps this stems from the purportedly dichotomous nature of the two, but what exactly disconnects the two?  The warm embrace of awe and inspiration that one can feel when staring at a beautiful scene in nature, some fiery and crimson sunset over a beach, is able to leave me a with repose, from which we derive legitimate value for no reason other than the scene’s beauty.  Yet there is something utilitarian etched into me that struggles to dismiss these things as senseless.

This struggle between rationality and spirituality, I believe, is an illusion created by our desire to simplify.  In truth there isn’t a balance that needs to be maintained between the two — the two aren’t opposing forces and hopelessly intertwined.  They simply are what they are.  

Bringing this back towards the now distant opening, I believe what I’ve attempted to describe here is perhaps the one of the major thoughts that one of those authors (Hesse) tries to convey in his works.  Or, maybe, it is even more simply put as being the illusory struggle between things we create, and how much simpler and truer life becomes when we no longer pit things in opposition of another. 



Regardless, I’m already finding some distaste in this style of writing.  We’ll see if and where things go from here.

Monday, January 5, 2015

Jan 5th, 2015


I write this now as the first creation of the new year.  It is always strange, labelling things with a number, especially years, and particularly upon the arrival of a new number.  A year is long enough that by around March or April the number assigned to it roots itself as a seemingly permanent facet of life, and then, when the number suddenly increases by a single digit, one feels a sense that something is wrong, the 5 is wrong, it isn't a 4.  This feeling then cascades, bursting with platitudes of melancholic ephemerality that despite being tattered from overuse are able to evoke the most unsettling of thoughts; that life is ever so slowly drifting further from its beginnings — languidly wading deeper and deeper out into an ocean of time.  The numbers now show as more abstract and undefinable things.  When you're closer to something, each step away seems substantial, each year possesses more meaning, more milestones.  Now, however, at a greater distance, I’m unable to definitively say “yes, a year has passed.”  Instead, I look upon the numbers on a calendar, see that the year has increased by another value then anxiously ponder how that happened.  This owes partially to age’s effusive power and part my own mind’s fallibility when attempting to condense and assign chronologies to feelings and memories.  I should think now that those stark divisions I perceived as a child between the years, the flamboyantly overstated events that represent a clear milestone in my development, will continue to sink towards deeper and more inaccessible recesses — shining now with a faint twinkle (a pallid remnant of the once ablaze form it took) reminiscent of some impossibly far away star projected onto the light-washed night sky of a city; a star that, like many actual stars, represents some part of a constellation—an era—complete with its own ill-remembered folklore and tall tales.