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Saturday, March 01, 2014

IS THERE AN ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM -- RESPONSE TO "BE HAPPY, DON'T WORRY!"


 

IS THERE AN ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM?
RESPONSE TO "BE HAPPY, DON'T WORRY!"
 
James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.

© March 1, 2014

 

REFERENCE:

If you like statistics, for every missive I post, it is usually not before 10,000 have read it, mulled it over in their minds, digested it, and then taken the trouble to compose a compelling and succinct essay that responds to what I have written.  This response emphasizes a truism: 

We are all connected, and as discouraging as it might be for us to consider, we think essentially about the same things, not only because we have similar equipment with which to do so, but because subliminal stimuli bombards our senses with the same incessant messages.

A READER WRITES:  
Dr. Fisher,

One statement in your "Be Happy" piece prompted me to sit down this morning and write about something that has long been fermenting.  Your statement was, "The major problem in life is one we never discuss."

I am following your example, and passing it on w/o letting it age and solidify overnight, and probably will be appalled when I re-read it tomorrow.  The title of my piece is this:

The Often Erotic and Potentially Dangerous “Elephant in the Room”                        
        

Dare we even discuss it?  The subject is one that rarely exists outside perhaps a trusted counselor’s quarters, or maybe overheard briefly in a mental ward.  It is that secret and private life we all live.
It takes place only between our ears. The thoughts that we are certain would disgust and appall our closest friends and loved ones. 

Careful scrutiny will reveal that It is a necessary construct of an evolved society.  The very nature of our modern interdependence requires that we must too often maintain polite and functional relationships with persons we don’t like or respect.  To the extent that we can hold harsh judgments or highly erotic thoughts without acting on them is the foundation of, and makes up the fabric of a civilized society.
We witness the catastrophic results when the barriers to acting on those types of thoughts fail to constrain behavior.  I leave to the reader to think about current international conflicts, with innumerable deaths injuries and displacements.  School shootings, sexual violence in the military and the work place, and family violence are familiar and heart-breaking consequences of instances of the “Elephant,” escaping the realm of thought and morphing into destructive behavior.

At a personnel level, what should we make of our own unsharable thoughts?  Should we try and displace them with healthier subject matter?  Is it even possible?  If (or is it presumptuous to say when) displacement fails, should we experience guilt?
What about our developing children?

Do we reveal the existence of the “elephant” in everyone's room by following the example of our parents, that is, letting our children struggle with their own inner-thought demons?
If you were expecting a resolution to the quandary, you will be sadly disappointed.  However, maybe it would relieve a psychological burden if we all were aware that our inner thoughts are really not that unique, or different from those of others.

The only thing others have a right to know (and often a duty) to judge is our behavior.
GQ
 
DR. FISHER RESPONDS:
The “elephant in the room” is an apt metaphor familiar to us all, given our cultural conditioning of guilt, fear, shame, anger, lust and regret.  It is the combat zone of thought.

In a way, thought is a movie picture in our head, which we may try to edit without success.  
It is our private entertainment, which we need share with no one.  As much as we might desire, others cannot understand what belongs only to us and not to them, no matter how close others are to us.
Thought, pleasure and pain ride on this elephant and it doesn’t always take us where we intend to go.  But don’t despair.  It is endemic to our society.  We seldom end up where our dreams promise we are going.

There isn’t an enterprise no matter how sophisticated that doesn’t have its “elephant in the room,” often the elephant takes it where it doesn’t intend to go. 
We have seen this with the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, with Obamacare, with failed interventions. 

Before we declare our biases, or attempt to justify them, the “elephant in the room” does not discriminate between Democrats and Republicans, Catholics and Protestants, Jews and Palestinians, and so on.  It is common to them all.

That said thought can be controlled counterintuitively by embracing it and allowing it to flow in the privacy of a walk, a shower, painting the house, working in the garage or garden, listening to music, and I don’t mean the noise that goes for music today, shooting baskets, strolling through the mall, or any number of quiet- like-times when the self is unimpeded.  It has no agenda. 
Some call this “meditation.”  I call this our creative verve, which is obvious in the tempo and cadence of your remarks.  You should do this more often.  It is not only healthy, but wise.

The kind of thought I’m talking about doesn’t leave a mark.  It is like the eagle in flight, not like the person trying to solve a problem. 
The thought is free.  When it is free, the “elephant in the room” is quiet.  There is nothing to fear.  The ledger is empty.
The mind is a wonderful playground.  When the mind is allowed to release verbal explanations and nonverbal perceptions, it discovers that the explanation is never the thing described for words can never be the thing.  Words, as you point out, are not actions, but actions are expressions of the state of the mind.  Society has confused this all of my life.

Ergo, when the mind gives itself permission to inquire, as you have been doing, about its biases, conclusions, concepts, ideals, and ideas, you are moving towards intimacy and away from fear, for there need be no fear at all.  You are love.  With love, there is peace.  There is no place for violence as there is no rationale to justify it. 
Religions, and I'm speaking of the four major religions, all commenced with this thought in mind, only to become entangled in explanations and perceptions losing their way into violence.  
Thank you for sharing.

Dr. Fisher

 

    

 

 

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