LIFE IS GREATER THAN WHAT CAN BE LIVED
Adam Blatner
November 26, 2008 (Click here to read other papers on philosophy, etc.)
One of the components of existential angst
is, I think, the intuitive awareness of the vastness of the imagination
and its impossibility of full realization. There’s just too much, and a
single life cannot begin to channel it, words or paintings or music
cannot begin to capture it. There is a bit of tragedy or poignancy in
this, especially if the awareness emerges in a mind that has been
taught to believe that one “should be all that you can be.” Phrases
like “living fully,” words like “completely,” and the like are aimed to
evoke an attitude of engagement and effort, but they offer no solace to
those who are conscientious. How much, after all, is enough? Is there
any place for letting go, for surrender, for contentment?
My diagnosis of this requires a semi-metaphysical philosophical
viewpoint as well as a psychological theory: The mind does have the
capacity to experience the ineffable—a word that indicates the
inability to capture what is thought or perceived in words. It can also
experience the numinous—another term that suggests that what is thought
or perceived is of great moment, relevance, significance, of compelling
force. Composers, artists, mystics, mathematicians, many bright people
of all sorts have experienced their inner intuitions as partaking of
numinosity, ineffability, and vastness or intensity of imagery or
richness—too much to ever be captured by the seemingly relatively weak
powers of creators who we ordinary mortals might consider to be
geniuses. They report, though, that what they have captured, in music,
in art, in poetry, etc., is but a weak shadow or stylized cartoon of
their inner vision! (Sometimes when I get into my visionary talking or
writing, I fear I become like the Saul Steinberg drawing here
portrayed:
So it is with the richness of life, the sheer eventful-ness, the
stories within stories, the overlap of other elements, the coincidences
and inter-penetration of influences. Within history, for example, I’ve
been impressed with several books on contra-history—essays that
speculate on what might have happened “if” one small event had gone
differently. I find such stories fascinating, as the authors lay out
much of the background and actual event, and then focus on a minor
element, playing out a plausible scenario that might eventuate if that
had happened differently. It helps to thicken the appreciation of
history. Another source stimulating this sensation has been the series
of books in the 1990s ? by Kenneth Burke based a the British
television series, revealing the many interconnections among events in
history.
Applying this to the feeling of life: Can I ever communicate to another
the fullness of my own life, even if I were to write an extensive
autobiography? It would miss the ineffable experiences of the smell of
crayons or clay in childhood, or the vividness of colored construction
paper. Nor can I recapture the vividness of the worlds of imaginative
play that my more plastic mind could enjoy in childhood. (I’ve tried
playing with toy cars and figures with my grandchildren, but it’s not
the same.) Ah, poignant loss. Oh, well.
And of course, that’s the point: What does it take to let go and move
on? Could it be that many people cannot easily move on because they
have been taught to cling, to grasp, to hold on, to think of loss as
bad? Certainly, much in our culture is infused with an over-valuing of
striving, and a pathological fear of contentment, lest it support
complacence, sloth, and non-accomplishment. But really, there is an
optimal middle amount, and the recognition of this idea that moderation
is optimal is too often missing in our culture.
There is a philosophical utility to considering that life is in fact
far greater than what can be known or lived. We have within our
interests a range of subjects, desires, ambitions. Were we more potent,
super-heroes of mind-worlds, we would indeed become more of the birds
and flying heroes, dragons and whales, firemen rescuing the frightened,
policemen fighting evil, and all the other characters we found amusing
or compelling to play out in our make-believe endeavors.
As we grow, there is again that sense of tragedy or poignancy at having
to leave this world in which we were free to expand our sense of self
into all possible roles. In drama, we can preserve a little more than
what ordinary folks can do, but I like to encourage people to continue
to cultivate their imagination and to create roles in which some of
this enjoyment can be continued, albeit in a somewhat modified and
refined way. (My wife and I wrote a book to this end, The Art of Play,
which is presently being revised.)
Other Manifestations of this Complex
Perhaps we might call this the Moses complex, mainly for
the story that Moses was able to glimpse God’s glory (Exodus 33:18-23).
The point is that what was allowed to happen was indirect: Moses was
placed in a cleft in a rock, covered with God’s hand “...until I have
passed by; then I will take away my hand, and you shall see my back;
but my face shall not be seen.”
Indeed, the thinking that led to this paper was stimulated by a dream
in which, among many other experiences, there was a sensation as I was
approaching the transition from dream into reverie that all the
impressions had to be poured through a narrow opening, as if a cereal
box were tipped and were pouring its contents through just one corner.
Along with this was the corresponding intuition that the fullness of
reality had to find as an outlet the relatively small vehicle of a
single actual human life. Another association was to the way sand could
only pass through the pinched middle of an hour-glass only a few
grains at a time. In reverie, pondering this image, other associations
came, such as a downward-pointing cone and the way a baby at birth also
needed to be pressed through a seemingly narrow canal. Later, I
wondered if some of the perceptions of fear and getting stuck that Dr.
Stan Grof describes as part of the deep archetypal residues of the
birth experience might also be reinforced by this “Moses” complex—i.e.,
the conundrum that our minds can express and lives can live out only a
small fraction of what our fullest psychic potential might be.
I noticed within this aforementioned dream a mild pang of grief at the
sense that it was a great pity that so much other beauty and insight
and experience would be lost to the world! Yet this experience was also
somewhat modulated with a pinch of humor, another pinch of surrender,
and a teaspoon of philosophical awareness that, paradoxically, the
grief (ideally) must be balanced by the surrender. It is just the way
life is.
A friend and colleague noted that another somewhat related dynamic
involves the foolish tendency to waste life by living in what I call
“the subjunctive state” of what “could” have been, or what “should”
have happened. They live in illusory dream of “if only” that depletes
their energies about either confronting the issues they face or
surrendering and getting on with other engagements. “Get a life,” is a
phrase that captures the intuitive recognition that someone is living
in this “if” fantasy. The point is to accept life’s limitations and
nevertheless engage it within the boundaries of reality.
A further dynamic involves the psychology of compassion. Others also
have so much life, and live out far less than their potential. From the
outside, it is sometimes easier to imagine the greater potentials, and
to be impatient with other’s recalcitrance or inertia; or indignant
about what seem to be external forces of oppression or neglect. We
sense their desire to live and expand their experience and it resonates
with this yearning to be all we imagine we can be.
Whether selflessly applied to others or self-consciously applied to
oneself, though, this pity is misplaced. It fails to allow for the
significant degree to which we are out of control. All that seems
blurry, and there are tiny currents of shame and guilt for not doing
more to rescue or give to others; or for not driving oneself harder.
For sensitive souls, these currents are stronger and generate a fair
amount of prevalent background guilt-shame, perhaps associated with
other negative emotions.
If Only
The Moses complex feeds on the subtle desires and fantasies that are
associated with what have been called “omnipotent fantasies” in
psychoanalytic literature. There are those, too, but these are not
really omni- or all-powerful, but still more than what’s realistic.
Consider the challenge: Would that we could:
– receive feedback on all that we do, all our gifts to the world
and the effects they have, the karma of our good deeds, the power of a
smile, a reaching out. Often—almost always—others don’t have the
sensitivity or capacity or knowledge to give this feedback, and the
ripples beyond the ripples multiply so their source cannot be
discerned.
– receive feedback with some insight on the mistakes we make, so that we can recognize our errors and correct them
– express the most vulnerable and subtle yearnings of our
soul for love, for spiritual connection, for resting into a place of
inner freedom
– express our dreams and numinous (i.e., deeply compelling
and meaningful) experiences. (Our culture is as yet quite ambivalent
regarding people’s semi- and fully mystical experiences,
parapsychological experiences, uncanny experiences, deeply felt
experiences.) I find that most folks have a few that they haven’t felt
safe sharing with anyone—a pity, because there are a few who would
receive them and reflect them wisely and care-fully. Admittedly,
though, this reticence is appropriate because most people don’t know
what to make of such phenomena and tend to want to defend against them,
calling them crazy, “just imagination,” “only coincidence,” and in
other ways discount them.
– express the depth of transpersonal passion that can be
operating in infatuation-romance, deep maturity romance (i.e., more
oxytocin than dopamine operating as the key neurotransmitter), the hate
and crazy rage of desperate battle (common in warriors), the
disapproving mask that hides overwhelming bewilderment at the intensity
and seeming weirdness of youth (the archetype of the planet Saturn),
the expansiveness of the reformed Scrooge (the Jupiter-like spirit of
Santa and Christmas), and so forth. The point is that the archetypal
forces that can sweep through a person are only partially explained by
more Freudian or personal psychological dynamics. We are all vulnerable
as part of the human condition. While we may exercise some
responsibility and equanimity in coping with these currents of
feelings, we cannot escape their entrance into our souls.
– express the depth of beauty, imagery, excitement, inspiration
that occasionally comes, sometimes filling the heart with religious
ecstasy, or in other ways trying to find expression
– hold on to or express in words the fullness of great
sensations of beauty, in music, in nature, in action, in “flow,” in
joy, and so forth
– to adequately express the desperate negativity that can
also afflict the soul. “Depression” or “Panic” hardly capture these
equal-and-opposite emotional storms.
– express or capture the sense of wonder, mystery,
astonishment, awe, tinged either with pleasure or dismay, depending on
the matrix of beliefs and understandings that serve as the context of
the aforementioned experiences.
I think a number of human activities seek to articulate this sense a
little more than ordinary life. Rituals of rites of passage and dramas
in general seek to bring attitudes of reverence and celebration to such
events. Poetry and the arts may highlight the experience. What good is
a coronation or the recognition of an award if not accompanied by some
hoopla, an oratorio written for this event, a little skit, a humorous
“roast,” a well-formulated and clearly enunciated toast?
The aforementioned depths and vastness of potentials for living hint at
two deeper levels than our ordinary waking consciousness: First, the
soul level, which is as mentioned, ten or a hundred or maybe a thousand
times broader, more complex, more intricate, more filled with
resonances among the various parts. Second, beyond this, there may be
registered in our puny consciousness a hint of the vastness beyond, the
level of Spirit, the awareness that all this may be multiplied by
factors of a million or more, through innumerable eons, light years of
space, on billions of other planets, life forms, stories, species,
evolutionary processes, dramas, comedies.
Through all of this is—from the viewpoint of an ego clinging to
preserve the coherence of one’s own life—the most grievous tragedy! Ah,
that so many potentials are cut short before their fullest
manifestation. But from the wider viewpoint of the Realities of Life,
death is necessary so that new life can have room, and this truth is
valid not only in terms of available material and energy, but also in
terms of the freedom to evolve new psychological and cultural forms.
The proper response is surrender, and Buddhist attitudes become most
relevant in coping with this type of existential angst.
The Moses Complex
I don’t think this tragi-comic awareness of unfulfilled life is a
neurotic complex, in the sense of tying it into some abnormality in the
normal sequence of psycho-social development. Rather, it is universal.
Yet I suspect that the sensitivity to experiencing the poignancy of
this dynamic varies tremendously. First, there would be a spectrum of
being able to find words to express any of this, as people vary
according to culture, vocabulary, education, experience, intelligence,
aesthetic sensitivity, insight, and so forth. For example, my
expression of the supreme irony of life, my diagnosis of this complex,
rests on the knowledge of scores of psychological, philosophical, and
spiritual elements, plus science and so forth. It may be that it
required all of these to come to a point of critical mass for me to
discern it. Others have other backgrounds—musical, artistic, poetic,
philosophical, with which to speak to these issues.
Second, there seems to be an innate sensitivity of temperament, so that
some people experience the difficulties of life—this being one complex
within many other difficulties—with more pain or poignancy than others.
Some of this perhaps is ameliorated by the more recent
anti-depressants; some may be ameliorated a bit by artistic expression,
if one is fortunate. Other people, I suspect, hardly notice the
feelings of dissonance, the tragic elements of life. Some of these may
sense it and have built up layers of defense to it; others perhaps
don’t have that much sensitivity to begin with. None of these positions
is intrinsically any more virtuous than any other. We play the cards
we’re dealt.
My hope in writing this is that by identifying the phenomenon—the sense
of compassionate angst at the unfulfilled potentials of life—that this
may help to identify and ameliorate some of the pain, as well as point
to a relatively constructive resolution. If this diagnosis is true,
then recognizing it for what it is will help: One life cannot possibly
begin to express all of the potentialities associated with that life.
The best we can do is live our “dharma,” live out with some effort at
engagement and integration as many of the potentials as seem wise and
useful. Associated with this should be an attitude of surrender and
letting go of what cannot be. This in turn is facilitated by
cultivating a transpersonal vision, philosophy, religious belief symbol
system, etc., that expresses a greater story, one that appreciates the
significance—however minute—of a single life, while also reminding the
individual of some greater story, some broader dramatic unfolding.
My Belief System
This is more poetic than literal: I envision the individual as the
nexus, the coming-together-point, of hundreds of talents, abilities,
temperament, archetypal tendencies, human instincts, mysterious
imaginative components, and so forth. They operate from many sources
and make up a unique combination of potentials that seek to be lived
out. The way life gets lived out is then a kind of game, a drama, with
tendencies to overshoot first this way, then that. Sometimes potentials
are sensed as too much and hidden, buried, cut short, and, ideally,
later redeemed. There are miracles in how we meet those people,
encounter this book or that teacher, get kicked in the pants in what
turns out to be a constructive direction, and so forth.
In other words, I envision a mass of soul potentials a hundred times
greater than who I can ever be. I do sense the possibility of
expressing or playing out a range of responses, from foolish, lazy,
frightened, paralyzed, short-sighted, to wise, energetic, courageous,
engaged, and long-sighted. So there is “free will” in this range of
possibilities, but that freedom is embedded in the larger limitations
of history, culture, misfortune and good fortune, and other broader
contexts.
The soul potentials in turn express spiritual currents of flow seeking
life expression—perhaps among billions of life forms on billions of
planets—that are again billions of times more complex and closer to
Divinity than what can be played out in this tiny corner of the
universe. It’s all fine, though, because it’s all part of the Divine
dance, discovery, play, adventure, invention.
The theme of creativity pervades the whole. In our lives, we have a
potential for being creative in hundreds of ways, from the games we
play as children to the opportunity to sing a melody to a loved one at
the time of dying. If we can participate in this creative process in
any ways—and pausing to savor the beauty, wonder, curiosity, sweetness,
and other emotions attending the creative process is also part of the
creative process!—, then we are participating as one of the cells in
the mythic Body of God, dancing into ever-more-ness.
Ever-More-Ness
The idea that there is a point of closure, of Omega finishing, of
resolution and stasis, is a projection of human consciousness. It is
we, not God, who must rest, who come to a point of tiredness. It is not
for us to presume that God must follow our particular bio-rhythmic
requirements. (One could argue that God rests a lot—just watch the
stillness of the lions on the plains. Most of the universe spends most
of its time just being, and in profound stillness.)
Instead, consider that it is much too far in the future for us to
properly speculate about the ends of our existence, in terms of
millions of years. Nor should we be attached to our destiny as a
species beyond the scope of thousands of years. Rather, it is more
proper for us to consider, as we can now do, our potential to take
greater responsibility to find sustainability, political and economic
stability and justice, social equality, and other noble goals. Our
world is yet far from these more obviously needed and theoretically
attainable goals.
(To explain the desire to speculate about the distant destiny of
humanyity, the mind has a tendency to fantasize the distant happy
ending as a way to magically get there, as a way to skip over the
not-insignificant barriers of even halfway getting there. Thus a child
wants to “be” a fireman, to fantasize a few high-point rescues or
heroic activities, denying the great majority of time spent in
training, in mundane study, in waiting, and so forth. So with many
other ambitions of childhood.)
Speaking of childhood, I like the image of God as a child rather than
as a king, in respect of a continuing engagement in invention and
adventure, in the creation of new games with new variations. God (in
this fantasy) may not get tired and need to nap or sleep—the metaphor
fails in this respect—but rather the symbol draws on the way that a
child can develop daily, gradually, over years! New skills emerge
almost imperceptibly. (Visiting my grandchildren a few times a year,
these changes are more obvious, more striking, compared to when I was
raising my children and lived with them through their emergence
day-to-day.)
An old friend just sent me a Thanksgiving poem on email: It is a verse
by the poet, Alfred Lord Tennyson. Ulysses is speaking to the crew of
his ship (and in the spirit of each of us as if we were crew of our own
ships):
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.
It may be that the gulfs will wash us down;
It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
And see the great Achilles, whom we knew.
Tho' much is taken, much abides; and tho'
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are,—
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
The Right Amount of Compassion
Today the insight is that of recognizing that what touches my heart and
brings tears to my eyes, makes me choke up a little, is the button
pushed by that which reminds me of unlived potentialities. Thornton
Wilder’s play, “My Town,” does this to me. (The fact that my beloved
wife, Allee, played the starring role in that play during her teen
years is probably a factor, but only one.) She also gave me a
book that illustrated the song sung by Pete Seeger (and the Byrds)
titled “To Everything There is a Season”—a folk song that derived its
words from a passage in the Bible (Ecclesiates 3:1) (Ain’t Google
wunnerful?!); the book again pushed my tear-buttons.
For a year or more I’ve been wondering what this deep tearfulness is
about. I wasn’t able to trace it down to any source. At last, the
meaning fits, or so it seems: I weep for all that could have been, for
the sheer preciousness not only of life lived, but of what could else
have been lived. The bird whose songs were not sung, the squished frog
in the road who didn’t get to eat those extra-yummy crickets and mate a
few more seasons to make lil’ pollywogs. Sure, it’s projection, but
there it is: I weep for that fifty-times-more-ness that I see in not
just my own upward-opening-cone of possibilities (see webpage on deep
maturity), but also the possibilities of those whom I love.
I weep more for those whom I’ve gotten to know enough so that I can
sense what further they have to live. I had a friend who lived quite
fully, but my tears, on reflection, following his death, was that he
didn’t have a sufficiently receptive audience for the insights of his
last years. They deserved to be noticed by more people.
And yet I know that letting go is the wisest path. It occurred to me
that according to another principle I’ve worked out—that of the
“optimal amount”—that to withdraw from opening my heart for fear of the
pain seems wrong. But it becomes overwhelming if I open my heart more
than, oh, say, 20%. I tend to quantify things—it helps to suggest
proportionality. It seems optimally human to open my heart, to feel
compassion for the drama of a loved one, or to wish that a loved one
would care about me—about 10-15%. More than that seems to be either
pity or I want to say to someone else, “Don’t deplete yourself that
way. I’m not that bad off.”
If I go to less than 2%, I feel that I’m not doing the ethical thing by
at least imagining what the situation might be like for them. I feel
too cold, uncaring. So I will some opening, some concern.
Admittedly, there is a range of that kind of concern. For most people
it’s quite small, and that relative uncaring is reciprocated. We hardly
know each other, if that much. For some within my social network, the
concern rises proportionately to our kinship or relationship plus
reciprocity or rapport.
Beyond 20%, though, I think we need to realize that there are many
other forces at work in the cosmos. Not only can we not actually help
much, but some of these forces involve the body-wisdom and unconscious
processes of those for whom we care, the need for them to learn from
their own foolishness, to discover resources from within themselves
that would be stifled by our foolish attempts at rescue, to encounter
their own karma. There are cultural and historical forces also
operating for them, as well as the relationships with all the others in
their social network.
These are rationalizations I use to let my kids, especially, live out
their own lives without my feeling overwhelmed with the compulsion to
give money and unasked-for-advice. It applies proportionally to others
in my world. Talking with my wife about how much and when and whether
also helps a lot, for sometimes this judgment is an ongoing process of
diplomacy and negotiation. It’s not by any means clear. But such
judgments are there for those who care for elderly parents, middle-aged
kids, younger kids and grandkids, other relatives and friends, etc.
Summary
My path is that of insight, of adventuring into the subtle realms of
mind—and discerning trends also in the subtle realms of collective
mind, in cultural trends—, and seeking to elucidate them for our
culture. I’m aware that likely only a small number of people enjoy
these reflections, but if I can encourage or inspire others in any way,
then my life’s drama is correspondingly multiplied in effect. Anyway, I
am finding it’s the only thing I can do that doesn’t make me feel that
I’m violating my potential or what in Yoga is called “dharma” or proper
duty.
I hope this essay on "Life is Greater than What Can Be Lived"
stimulates some feedback from you. It is a provisional essay and would
be enriched by your comments.
Email me at adam@blatner.com