I don’t understand why, according to Blogger stats, this
blog has received over 14,000 page views in less than twenty four hours. They
come, apparently, from more than twenty countries scattered around the world.
And yet no one is speaking to me either to react, agree, disagree, or discuss. Nobody
ever does, and frankly I’m glad they don’t because I know nothing. I’m no kind
of influencer and wouldn’t want to be. That sort of thing is better left
dangling from the pallid fingers of celebrities and presidents who delude
themselves with the notion that fame and power endow them with the mind of a
genius and the wisdom of the ancients. About the feeble minded who follow them
no more need be said.
But I do have strong suspicions. I suspect that what we are
conditioned to regard as the only true reality is actually just the final
frigid 10ft at the summit of Everest, and that it’s enveloped in a dense mist
hiding the variety of riches running rampant on the lower slopes. And that
leads me to wonder on a daily basis whether the death of the body is not so
much an ending as an awakening.
So how do I find out whether I’m right or not except by
dying? I can read everything from the Bardo Thodol to the peevish pronouncements
of the Catholic Church to the pointless and probably fraudulent NDE experiences
presented as ‘proof’ on YouTube. Why believe any of it? How can they know? (And
what is their motivation for making the claims?)
And I’m becoming ever more disenchanted with this mortal
realm, this icy summit littered with the detritus of disinformation and general
dishonesty. Fakery is everywhere, usually driven by pecuniary or bigoted
self-interest. It’s a realm in which the hum of mother culture draws the Line
of Axiom – an invisible but highly potent barrier between that which may be
discussed and that which must be accepted without question because it’s set in
extra-reinforced concrete. Such is a major mainstay of political, commercial,
societal, religious, and media practice everywhere.
The result of these suspicions is that they leave me
wandering under flat grey skies in a featureless no man’s land. I used to
relate to the culture which reared me, and to the people who mostly occupy it,
but I can’t do most of that any longer. The culture seems to have too much wrong
with it and the people speak a different language from me. Daniel Quinn did
warn that once you’ve heard the hum of mother culture you can’t un-hear it, and
he was right. To me, the hum is growing louder and so there’s no way back. Equally,
I can’t walk forward with confidence either because a landscape without
reference points offers few satisfactory clues as to what direction I should be
taking.
I mentioned recently that I’m currently without a car. Well,
I was offered one – just an elderly but reliable runner – at a knock down
price, and I’ve been agonising over the decision for a couple of weeks. One
part of me recognised that the motor car is probably the most visible icon of
modern, developed society. Indeed, some cultures – most notably the US – have gone
so far as to build their infrastructure around it. Its identification with a
culture from which I now feel largely remote was the reason for deciding
against. On the other hand, I still have to operate within the culture to some
extent for practical reasons, and a car would provide me with more opportunity,
convenience, and freedom. That was appealing, and yet I still rejected the
offer.
But I’m tired of typing now, so maybe I’ll make the post
about the epiphany which this brought about (regarding its relevance to the
depressive tendency) another time.