Repentance

Repentance
I Repented, that's why I'm a happy godless slut now.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

No Gods, No Heroes

The phenomenon of idol- or hero-worship is fascinating to me. For many reasons. Personal and not so much. Emotionally and intellectually. It’s something that I want to study more and in some detail at some point and I hope that I’m afforded, despite everything, the opportunity to do so at some point. But for now, there’s this:

Far too many of the people I have looked up to throughout my entire life have failed to live up to the pedestal I put them on, and in many ways that is extremely frustrating. Both religious and secular heroes have fucking failed miserably. On the other hand, that was not, in the end, what drove my deconversion process and it will not drive me away from the secular movement either. In fact, in some ways, it is an incredibly important lesson, perhaps especially important for one who, like me, is still in the relatively nascent phases of being openly secular and atheist and trying my hand at what secular activism is available to me.

This has nothing to do with anything. It's just a neat picture and I like it.
There is no single figure that remains so important to me that when I find out that, like everyone else, they have failures, faults, or possibly even are people that I don’t even really like personally, it will (hopefully) disturb me not one whit. It has not, so far. Ever since Professor Richard Dawkins’ spectacular display of privileged white maleness and dismal logical fallacy #FAIL last year, I recognized that I can still love and respect and learn fantastic and wonderful things from his books and at the same time recognize that he still has things to learn. He does not need to be perfect in every respect any more than I am perfect in every respect. Holy shit, when I consider the perspective of myself being judged and dismissed in the same way as it is tempting to judge and summarily dismiss these “leaders” and “heroes” in their totality because of their imperfections, I have to humbly offer silent thanks to those around me that they do not reject me outright. (ß Tangled sentence, I know. Deal with it. It stays, because it says what I want it to say and it makes sense in my head.)

It has been freeing, too. I now feel free (or freer, anyway, I’m still hyper-self-conscious and hyper-sensitive to my desire for acceptance and shit like that) to be critical of what others think and inspect what they say a bit more carefully. Rather than trying to mold my opinions and thoughts and everything else about me so that I fit in the niche. Like, please please please, can I be cool, too? Granted, I still have to beware of my own tendency to do this. It doesn’t go away in the snap of a finger, and I still find in myself that unconscious desire to have an idol to worship, a hero to look up to, an example to which I can point and say, “That is the right. Good. Whew! I don’t need to think about it anymore, I can just copy them.”

See? That last bit is just the thing, I think. The reason that many of us so desperately WANT those heroes is because thinking about ALL THE THINGS is HARD. Well, so be it.


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1 comment:

  1. I grew up around people of incredible talents. Geniuses in their primary fields, and often as well-rounded as an amateurishly juggled egg. Everyone has varying strengths and weaknesses and mental farts in all aspects of life. And knowledge gaps! To learn all things is not possible, yet we chuckle when someone exposes themselves ignorant of some "common" fact. Pinky up, salad fork isn't to be used on the steak (even if the dressing is pretty good on beef), right-not-left-hand rule for electromagnetic fields... My favorite had to be in middle school, when a lass clearly was trying to straighten out a half-heard truth... that one starts measuring, on a ruler, from wherever 0 is marked. Sometimes, there's a bit of extra material to keep the end wearing off from altering accuracy. But what she said was "Do you start measuring from the 0 or the 1?" And promptly turned pink as her brain parsed her own sentence. ^^; Ah, youth.

    No hero can withstand the scrutiny that comes with the pedestal. But their stories can endure. Good and bad alike. The lessons from either can be of great benefit. Knowing what has been done before, and the result... that is the benefit of history, and the accumulation of knowledge. It isn't, therefore, wrong to emulate aspects of heroes... but to become them, and never surpass, is an element of tragedy.

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