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Title: Psychopaths in the Village Subtitle: Sociopathy, Civilization and Rewilding Date: Dec 19 2012 Source: http://www.mythic-cartography.org/2012/12/19/psychopaths-in-the-village/ Authors: Willem Larsen Topics: Civilization, Strategy, Rewilding Published: 2014-01-09 11:00:43Z
to my friend Thaddeus for first suggesting I begin perceiving the presence of psychopathy, and for forgiving me for my blindness to psychopathic behaviors in my own community
This article springs from several urges; to fully own my own responsibility for thinking critically (with a Trackerâs eye) about the issues of my life, and to create a deeply safe community space for my extended family and friends to flourish as human beings and rewilders. Upfront, let me make it totally clear: I have no credentials or academic expertise in this area. I write as just another adult human being.
Iâd like to begin this rumination on psychopaths by talking about the wonderful diversity of human beings, a diversity taken for granted by traditional indigenous minds, yet feared and resisted by modern peoples.
What kind of diversity? We have genderqueer diversity (how many genders are there â two, three, four, five, can we even number them?), we have diversity of cognition (autism, dyslexia, and more), diversity of perception (the blind, the Deaf, and more), handedness (right-hand dominant, left-hand dominant, cross-dominance, situational-dominance, etc.), and diversity of conscience (empaths, psycho/socio-paths, âsheepleâ).
No, I canât list them all here, but I think that makes for a good beginning. Keep in mind every one of these lines of diversity expresses in degrees and dimensions. For example, we donât experience blindness and the lack of it just as an either/or state. You can have more or less blindness, and experience blindness in different ways (color-blindness, night-blindness, face-blindness, etc.)
All of these diversities have been with us as long as weâve been human. I donât doubt this in the least. I donât see anything broken or handicapped or accidental about any of these peoples. I mean, humans donât fall into two categories â âfully humanâ humans, and âless-than-human/unnaturalâ humans. Right handed dominant folks donât necessarily behave more gracefully (latin: more âdexterâ-ous) and left-handed preferring folks donât necessarily behave more evilly (again, latin: more âsinisterâ).
And yetâŠ
Yet, if you allow your eye truly to scan the list, youâll see one curious member of our tribe standing out â the Psychopath (aka sociopath). Mustnât we see them as especially broken? Especially wrong?
Even after allowing for the curious variances amongst all the others â the Deaf, the transgender, the autistic, and on and on â even after allowing and respecting the dignity and fresh perspectives of all these peoples, and breathing deep, allowing that they too have helped make human cultures work for countless millenia, not as unnatural humans, but as fully natural onesâŠ
âŠmustnât we still sharpen our tongues (and knives!) against the Sociopath?
Well, perhaps. Certainly, we canât do ânothingâ about them. As it turns out, the anonymity and individual-glorifying nature of the modern world has created the richest predatory habitat ever conceived for these human beings without a conscience, without any need for human connection.
Others have written eloquently about this â Peter Bauer from a rewilderâs point of view, Clinton Callahan from an anti-civ point of view, Joe Brewer from a policy and politics point of view, Dr. Martha Stout from a popular science point of view, Dr. Robert Hare from research and clinical point of view.
Most people react to the word âpsychopathâ, as used in everyday life (as in, âthat guy/gal is a psychopath [sic]â), from either a colloquial angle (understanding that the speaker doesnât intend the clinical definition), or the true crime novel angle (treated as a phenomenon that happens to other folks, but not us). Calling someone, right here, right now, a âpsychopathâ just perpetuates melodrama, doesnât itâŠ? The individual in question â âthey canât possibly be all that bad.â
But for psychopaths â who may appear in our culture at a rate somewhere between 1â5% (yes, that means in a room of 20 people, a psychopath could easily stand in plain sight, unrecognized), and for folks with some degree of, but not full-blown, psychopathic behavior this rate increases up to a possible 15%, or 3 out of 20 â as commonly as they might appear in our company, we seem awfully unprepared to deal with them.
Yet almost every indigenous culture in the world has a human role, often called a âwitchâ by modern observers (meaning a practitioner of black, rather than white magic, assuming you define those squishy concepts as most seem to do), filled by a community member with predatory behavior and a lack of a conscience.
The modern eye has long mocked the ignorance of the village âwitch-huntâ; and certainly in the modern age (medieval modernity included!) witch-hunts provide just another horrific opportunity for sociopaths to predate on human communities.
And yet I begin to understand that the feared âwitchesâ of old â again, not conscience-burdened wisdom keepers and medicine people that we call âwitchesâ, but those without any such burden â perhaps once isolated and easily ferreted out in close-knit village communities, have become so well-fed on human misery, and have acquired so much power, that whole societies have bowed to the pressure to glorify what these predators glorify. Which, as I mentioned above, might explain some things about the present state of civilization.
We find ourselves several thousand years into a culture seemingly born to serve these predators.
Before we go farther, letâs describe psychopathy. At this point, most folks researching psychopaths agree that âpsychopathyâ (or âsociopathyâ, which gives it more of a social-context coloring) labels a syndrome of behaviors that appears to different degrees, in different dimensions. According to the book, Almost a Psychopath (published by Harvard Medical School for those dealing with the still terrible, but not âfull-blownâ, instances of subcriminal psychopathy), you can look for 10 indicators of less-than-the-full-nightmare psychopathy:
1. Charming and glib, with an answer for everything.
1. Lack of empathy, difficulty to understand and/or appreciate the emotions of others.
1. Opportunities for moral choices result in decisions made for their own self-interest.
1. Repeated lying, even when unnecessary or for minor reasons.
1. Conning and manipulative.
1. When criticized, they always place fault and blame on others.
1. Lack of true remorse when they have caused harm to others.
1. Limited ability to express feelings for others, or maintain relationships.
1. They find it easy to ignore responsibilities.
1. People and situations seem to exist solely for satisfying their needs and wants.
This is a pretty awful list, as embodied by a person standing in front of you and exhibiting these behaviors, even keeping in mind that this list represents a non-violent, non-âcriminalâ expression or degree of psychopathic behaviors.
Dr. Hareâs research on the brains of fully psychopathic individuals shows that they literally do not have the same emotional experiences as us. They feel happiness, frustration, thrills, but donât seem capable of truly felt rage, joy, sadness, love, or other feelings, though they may commonly use false displays of these (tantrums, crocodile tears, etc.) feelings to influence others.
Because they donât have the same deep feelings, or donât have them to the same degree, for psychopaths, describing âloveâ or âterrorâ to psychopaths compares to describing colors (âcornflower blue, not tealâ) to the blind.
In addition, researches like Hare do not consider psychopaths âinsaneâ, and psychopaths see themselves as perfectly healthy (often more healthy!) and reasonable. We live in a dog eat dog world, after allâŠ?
So says the psychopath, anyway.
Psychopaths, due to how they use their brains, also seem less aware of surrounding context â they have a predatory focus, and when they do get âcaughtâ it happens because they didnât see the surrounding warning signs, even though we may consider them otherwise brilliant.
This connects with the modern conception that we donât have a left brain/right brain (i.e., math/art) split, but rather a focused manipulation of the defined/expanded awareness of the undefined split.
This has caused me to wonder about the psychopathâs ability to perceive with âowl-eyesâ/wide-angle vision. I wonder if this could offer another way to track the presence of a psychopath. Certainly when I have been with people who, in my estimation, showed some psychopathic behaviors, they seemed in a kind of perpetual tunnel-vision, unaware of their surroundings in odd ways.
The other symptom of psychopathology â for some reason not on the checklist for subcriminal psychopathy, but certainly present on the âfull-blownâ criminal checklist â a hunger for thrills and excitement, comes from the total lack of drama in the psychopathâs inner life, that the rest of us experience on a daily basis.
Can you imagine all of that emotional pull and push just disappearing? How would it feel?
The psychopath will tell you how it feels â a never-ending battle with intense boredom. Suffocating, agonizing boredom.
What would you do with all that free time, absent of all that drama? Well, again, in the right context, a psychopath will happily tell you â seek thrills, manipulate people, turn the social landscape into a game that you can win or lose.
It occurs to me, that though this in fact describes deep social disconnection, this sounds like mainstream American marketing/media/business culture. It may not surprise you that American/Western culture seems to produce psychopaths at a couple orders of magnitude greater than, say, Asian (Chinese/Japanese) culture. The statistics: 1â5% in Western culture, as opposed to .03% in Asian cultures (according to Dr. Stoutâs book). Say what you like about Asian culture (Confucianism terrifies me), we really have brought the horrors of civilization to a pinnacle in the U.S.
Iâll bring this to a close for now; I have lots more to share though!
Have you had experiences with people exhibiting psychopathic behaviors? What did you learn from them? Do you feel uncomfortable even thinking in terms of such a âhot-buttonâ, inflammatory label? Iâd love to hear your thoughts â I may address some of your responses in the next post in this series (yes, more to come!)
This entry was posted on Wednesday, December 19th, 2012 at 11:17 pm and is filed under Philosophy of Tracking.
http://www.mythic-cartography.org/2012/12/21/a-wolf-in-sheeps-clothing/
Letâs reconnect with what this subject offers us; how it can improve our lives as rewilders, human beings, village-creators.
In reading about psychopaths, something hit my consciousness with an almost physical force, that in a certain sense has nothing to do with this terrifying syndrome, but rather the oppositeâŠ
If psychopaths experience so much success, and in truth (much like no house has an immunity to a fully determined burglar, given enough time) can manipulate almost anyone, then what does this tell us about the rest of the world, the 95% or more of humanity?
It means that the vast majority of people, almost every human you meet, has a deeply feeling heart hungry for human connection, relationship, meaning. It means we share a language of love, joy, rage, sadness. And this commonality makes us vulnerable to the psychopath who can only imagine what this might feel like.
When I realized this, when it hit home, I think I also realized that I had begun to assume that many, many people I met every day didnât care, had stone-hearts, when looking at what weâre doing to the world and ourselves.
Now I fully realize, that regardless of any other issues, 95% of the people I meet only feel fully nourished by deep, real connections with other human beings.
Stop and absorb this. Take a moment to do this.
A psychopath abuses this knowledgeâŠbut this knowledge empowers us as cultural creatives.
So then, accepting thatâŠhow do we explain the present monstrosity, the devouring of the world?
We feel pretty confident, from American-based research performed after World War II on the nature of âevilâ and human morality, that ~65% of a given population have an ability, and a willingness to mute their conscience when influenced to do so by someone they accept as an authority. They still have a conscience; their actions still haunt them (in the form of PTSD, for example), but they will do it in the presence of sufficiently powerful, eloquent authority.
However, ~30% of a given population has a far less developed ability to do so â you might consider these the ones protesting in the streets, arguing with family members, acting out and objecting to the pressure of authority to act against their conscience. They canât ignore it. They canât mute it so easily.
And then, ~5% of that population requires little or no inducement to act in ways contrary to the expected desires of a healthy conscience, and seems to suffer no remorse.
Does this spread accurately represent human communities through out time, back through 200,000 years and beyond? I suppose we may never know. For our purposes, I propose that we treat it as such; that this probably biased, American vision of human behavior in terms of authority and conscience, that we accept it fully.
If nothing else, if you live in the modern Western world, you have to deal with it no matter what you think about its normality.
Again, perhaps surprisingly, I find these statistics inspiring. This means that 30% of the people you meet struggle deeply with muting their conscience, even under authoritative pressure. 1 out of 3 people!
I can also imagine a world where the 60%, whom I sometimes call âsheepleâ for their willingness to go along with the herd, contribute deeply needed stability to human communities by a stubborn willingness to perpetuate old wisdom and long held traditions even in the face of questions and uncertainty. I equate the âauthoritativeâ figure in western culture, to the traditions of indigenous culture. What authority exists in an egalitarian, non-hierarchical indigenous village? The authority of tradition, of course.
I donât doubt this makes human beings more successful; if we abandoned every traditional belief or tool just because we started to question it, or it became uncomfortable, then, where would we end up? Nowadays many rewilders probably wish we had fought harder to resist change.
And yet, on the flip-side, now all our modern traditions, values and conservatism seem to drive us towards our doom. So letâs start listening to that 30%!
Weâve arrived at another way to think about Daniel Quinnâs notion of needing âanother Story to be inâ [sic].
So we have talked about the âsheepleâ, what about the âwolves in sheepâs clothingâ?
My inability to find a wild, nature-based analogy for the predatory behavior of psychopaths disturbs me more than anything else. I feel strongly that we must accept everything in the world as something that happens, that has happened, that may happen again. Meaning, we must accept it as natural. We canât treat reality as âunnaturalâ. I feel this as a tracker, a thinker, a human being.
You would think, then, that this psychopathic behavior would pop up other places. Letâs find it together.
What do you think? Where do you believe you see a lack of a conscience in the natural world?
This entry was posted on Friday, December 21st, 2012 at 2:32 pm and is filed under Philosophy of Tracking.
http://www.mythic-cartography.org/2012/12/22/rewilding-shame/
I ended the last post with the question, âwhere else do we see psychopathic behaviors in nature?â
I still want to explore this, but not today. Today letâs talk about remorse.
Shame and guilt has done tremendous emotional damage to many rewilders. In the modern world, we use shame and guilt as a whip to motivate the enslaved and the colonized. We embed emotional violence in our very language (see the excellent writings of Marshall Rosenberg on Nonviolent Communication). We condemn, in order to compel others to behave as we want, and praise for the same reasons.
Even for those of us who want to create a richer life, unless we spend regular time examining our language, we unknowingly injure those we love with âshouldsâ and âoughtsâ and âyouâre so wonderful!â
For these reasons, I donât speak of shame and guilt lightly. However, in order to talk about conscience (or the lack thereof), we must talk about the empathic experience of our hearts hurting because we âfeel how others feel about usâ â their anger, sadness, whether imagined or real. On this blog, and in the research on psychopaths, we mean the term âconscienceâ in this way. And though our culture uses guilt and shame as a weapon, I also know that human communities stick together partly because of this capacity to feel shame and guilt over actions that have hurt the group, and therefore drive action to repair damage and heal communal bonds.
Remorse, shame, guilt, all of these words describe painful feelings that cause us to want to grow, want to change, to improve ourselves. Painful feelings of shame, in a healthy conscience, happen on their own without any blaming or coercion, and help us to point our learning towards growing as a community and strengthen bonds. Maintaining these bonds feel deeply nourishing to human beings. We pursue them because of how they make us feel.
We work on our ability to âget alongâ and connect with each other precisely because of the twin phenomena of a hunger for the deep pleasure of familial ties and friendships, and the experience of remorse when we fail at obtaining or maintaining these well.
Except the psychopath, who of course, seems to only have the ability to feel emotions very shallowly â frustration and pleasure, for example, rather than anger, fear, and joy.
I alternate between talking about âpeople who exhibit psychopathic behaviorsâ and simply using the label âpsychopathsâ. Honestly, the word âpsychopathâ gets in the way of what we need to talk about here, because it implies, no matter how many disclaimers I write, an on/off, either/or extreme neurobiological state. Until I can come up with a better way of talking about them â not only does âpsychopathâ imply an all-or-nothing condition, but it also causes an instant hot-button emotional reaction trained from media across countless movies, true crime novels, and decades of television â perhaps we at least need a new word, like âdisempathâ, that connotes the true issue at hand: the inability of certain individuals to experience or empathize with emotions. Iâm not sure. Creating a new label still perpetuates the innate problem of labeling, still leaves unaddressed the degrees and dimensions in which you can express the extent of the individualâs undeveloped emotions and empathy. Weâll just have to exercise our e-prime I suppose!
Now letâs start tracking. I want to review some of the behaviors psychopaths exhibit that act as âwarning colorsâ to their biological inability to feel deep emotion or remorse, and thus crave thrills that require predation on other human beings.
Psychopaths live in the moment, immersed in an impulsive Now, and if you meet them on those terms, you will surely fall prey. You must look at their tracks, their trails, their history, in order to recognize them.
Youâll notice first that psychopaths donât really seem to grow or change over time. Because of their inability to feel remorse, they donât and canât focus their learning on how to âget alongâ and build more satisfying relationships. Therefore they leave a trail of drama and bitter ex-friends, ex-business associates, and family members. And they continue on in the present moment, just like they always have, in a kind of perpetual adolescence, using the same tactics to get their needs and wants met at the cost of developing a healthier community around them. They canât even see this trade-off, because they donât have the emotional eyes to see it (or the lack of it).
They have a poor sense of smell. Yes, as recent research suggests, due to their poor ability to use the front part of their brain, a region involved in planning and impulse control, other capacities governed by this area, such as distinguishing between different smells, also seem to fall victim to their handicap.
Gestures (while talking) increase when describing emotional states or using emotional words. As you may know from my work with endangered languages, the use of hand gestures increases âfluencyâ, even in our mother tongue. When we struggle to use a word, or with language that we havenât mastered, hand gestures can help us âpull it outâ more fluently. Psychopaths seem to need gestural support when talking about subjects that they really can never understand; emotions and empathy.
They seek thrills and edgy experiences, often seeming âmore aliveâ than other people. They may seek physical thrills, along with creating crises so that they can then solve them. Drama seems to follow them wherever they go, whether or not it affects them.
Grandiosity. They value themselves and their own abilities quite highly; they have a very healthy self-esteem.
They use tantrums and crocodile tears to get what they want. Because theyâve mimed these emotions, they can shake them off as if nothing happened.
They seem glib and charming, using language oddly; they go on more tangents, more often than others, connect sentences oddly, contradict themselves. Like the psychopath who replied, when asked if he had ever committed a violent crime, âNo, I never have, but once I had to kill someone.â This may derive from a combination of the unusual structure of their brain, and an innate desire to manipulate. In any case, their cobbled-together syntax reveals the strangely scrambled cognition (even if brilliant!)
Their behavior doesnât change with the application of consequences, punishments, or pain. This may connect with their impulsivity and shallowness, but psychopaths donât seem to care about any future pain; they donât experience fear or anxiety. You canât threaten or intimidate them. They only respond to rewards, not punishments, and in fact they seem to experience pleasurable stimuli twice as intensely as non-psychopaths. Imagine the behavior of someone completely driven by their own pleasure, with little or no experience of fear or anxiety.
Their predatory focus may act like tunnel-vision, damping their awareness of surrounding context. Does this imply a bias towards the focused-manipulation hemisphere of the brain, over the expanded-awareness hemisphere, even more so than already exists in Western culture? Would a psychopath struggle with using âowl-eyesâ (wide-angle vision)?
They lie consistently, even in minor situations that may defeat their purpose. This odd compulsion means that it doesnât take much to discover the trail of lies; just start double-checking, out of habit, what most folks say, and if you run across a trail of consistent lying it will instantly become obvious.
I donât claim this as a complete list â certainly Iâve left out the violent behaviors and criminality that the most extreme psychopaths exhibit â but I think this works great as a starting point for those of us wanting to have a rough sense of what to look for.
Again, these behaviors and symptoms will all happen to a degree, not in an all-or-nothing manner. It depends on the extent of the particular individualâs emotional damping. I assume, as with all things, that a whole range of emotional perception must exist, from almost zero emotions (full-blown psychopath) all the way to an inability to distinguish between oneâs own emotions and others (full-blown empath). Perhaps other dimensions too â could humans who mostly experience anxiety, or only love, exist?
It also happens that children, with fully felt emotions, with poor parenting and/or a toxic culture, can grow up ill-equipped to connect with othersâ emotional experience. Psychiatrists call these people ânarcissistsâ, and they may resemble psychopaths in every way (grandiosity, aggression, charm, tantrums, etc.) except one: they feel ongoing pain over their inability to create and maintain healthy relationships, losing contact with friends, spouses, children. They experience emotions; but they never had the chance to develop empathy.
For my own children, to keep their empathic capacities healthy and intact, and out of common-sense good parenting, I donât ever âpunishâ them. I constantly redirect their minds to their feelings and the feelings of others, without much explaining or discussion. How do you feel? How do they feel? Why? What can you do to make it better?
Again, we still have more to talk about, perhaps one more blog post, on what we can do about it if we run across these individuals. From a rewilder/trackerâs point of view, how can we possibly respond to psychopathic behavior?
This entry was posted on Saturday, December 22nd, 2012 at 6:24 pm and is filed under Philosophy of Tracking.
http://www.mythic-cartography.org/2012/12/24/beauty-and-horror/
This essay is a part of the Animist Blog Carnival of October 2013. To read other animist perspectives on death, please visit the Earth Animist Blog.
To read works from previous Animist Blog Carnival or join us, visit headquarters here: The Animist Blog Carnival at Eaarth Animist.
A short story about a psychopath, from Wikipedia:
ĂáčŁĂč is involved within the Orisha-IfĂĄ system of YorĂčbĂĄ religion as well as in African diasporic faiths like SanterĂa/Lukumi and CandomblĂ©, developed by the descendants of enslaved West Africans in the Americas.
What do you think?
As you read this blog post, remember, I definitely donât intend that you consider psychopathic behavior harmless, or something we can blithely tolerate, or anything of the sort.
Psychopaths test us, they test our individuality and the strength of our village, and unfortunately in the modern era, they find the strengths of our souls and villages severely lacking. We ourselves give them the language to abuse us, the anonymous landscape in which to hide, the needy codependence that prevents us from holding strong boundaries like adults.
I mentioned before that wisdom in this arena would lie somewhere in the natural world, and said I couldnât find it. Well, I actually did have a trail to follow, a glimmer of a suspicion. Inside me a story has begun to spun out, another way to rewild our relationship with an oft-times terrifying, and always beautiful world.
I strongly believe in a loving, life-affirming universe. And yet, that doesnât mean the suffocating love, security and comfort promised by civilized lips. That means the brutal, testing, beautiful life-affirming forces of a fully alive world. Burning cold and heat, carnivores hungry for the children of all species.
The storms of life donât judge your degree of naughty or nice before they blow your house down â Hurricane Sandy killed and injured, and rendered homeless, anyone in her way. The storms of life prune trees, churn landscapes, roll the dice to create more fertility and possibility growing out of a completely rearranged ecosystem.
Do we consider this psychopathic behavior? I deeply believe in the loving force of a storm, and yet the storm will take your children if you donât pay attention. Doesnât a psychopath do the same thing?
Within the body of these people-without-a-conscience, their cells and organs take care of each other, celebrate and feast each other, and yet at the human-to-human level this consideration and conscience disappears. Perhaps it appears again at the village-to-village level, where the psychopath acted as an original trickster force pruning and testing human communities to continually grow themselves into more aware, wise people, readying them for the greater storms of the world, for the larger tricksters that range and predate across ecosystems?
The Christmas-time whip-wielding Krampus in Austria, the Sacred Clowns of Pueblo indians, Coyote in the Northwest US native culture, the dice-playing Lords of Death of the Tzutujil, donât these all display âpsychopathicâ behavior, a lack of conscience, a willingless to lie and manipulate to get their way, no matter what the context?
The Cooperâs Hawk plucking one chirping Robin chick after another out of the nest, only leaving the one that finally learns to stop loudly begging for food (read Jon Youngâs What the Robin Knows for more on these dramas of the bird world), while the rest of the terrified bird community weeps silently in terror.
In interacting with those playing with rewilding, or reconnecting with indigenous ways of thinking, Iâve often run into the âIâm a coyote, love me or hate me babyâ gambit â where an individual defends a cruel streak by painting themselves in the holy colors of the Coyote. Depending on the native tradition that they want to use as a âcall to authorityâ to excuse their behavior (native peoples have many diverse stories about coyotes, some more noble, some less so), this also then means we can consider them a ridiculous shit-eating son of a bitch. Literally, according to the stories of the NW trickster Coyote. Which they themselves might feel okay with â but it reminds us that though Holy, we donât want to embody the manipulative cruelty and helplessly self-defeating ways of the trickster Coyote. We want to learn from him, walk through the world as clear-eyed adults ready for the appearance of this teacher. Ready for ĂáčŁĂč.
What do you do before a storm comes? You prepare.
What do you do while a storm rages? You endure, using all the wisdom you can muster.
What do you do after a storm passes? You pick up the pieces â grieve what youâve lost and praise what you still have. And perhaps most importantly, you reflect deeply on the lessons youâve learned to prepare you for the next storm.
These answers all work just as well for human psychopaths, for Storms-in-human-shape, as it does for these natural forces.
These answers all work just as well for humans wearing the skin of a psychopath, such as the psychopath-skin uniforms of soldiers and police officers, or bureaucrats.
Anytime someone says, âItâs nothing personalâ, you know youâve met someone wearing the skin of a psychopath. A storm doesnât mean it personally either. If we think of the civilized world as an array of toxic natural forces, of storms borne from human psychopathic culture, that we must prepare for, endure, grieve, and learn from, celebrating the continuance of a people sufficiently magnificent and wise to justify their survival.
What do we do when our culture itself seems propped up by sheeple in psychopath-skins, wherever we look? In this culture that has digested the values of a psychopath â the lust to win, the lust for power, for control,the hunger to know âhow to win friends and influence peopleâ, what can we possibly do?
If we pick up the lance to defend our families, does that cause us to don the skin of a psychopath?
I suspect that the problem lies with the urge to âwinâ, an abstraction and part of the matrix of psychopathic values that civilization perpetuates. Humans donât want to win â like all living things, they want to live, love, and fight well. In a worthy way that justifies the food they must kill to maintain their own life, to justify their own body.
Perhaps we can defend our families safely, sanely, if we just say âToday is a good day to dieâ, and fight whether or not we can possibly win.
Perhaps we best defend our people regardless of whether any of us will survive â to show our love and the greatness of our hearts by sacrificing our bodies, âwinningâ whether we win or lose.
I continue to carry these questions. I donât believe in one answer; how will you live in a world where a roll of the dice means the death of your children? Where lone predators parasitize your friends, and where Presidents justify the murder of distant villages while they cry crocodile tears over the tragedies in our backyard?
Whatever else, I know we must all endeavor to improve ourselves as clear-eyed adults, make ourselves stronger and wiser, and our families and communities too. Most of the living community adores a natural human being just as they adore each other; they adore our tears, our songs, our gifts. They feel affection when, to eat, we kill them with respect and compassion; they bring us our stories and dreams, they raise our children when lost in the woods.
But the Lords of Death donât care about our tears; they only care about turning our bodies into mud, the substrate of all life. A dirty job; but someone has to do it.