“TIME OUT FOR SANITY!”
– An excerpt from 2nd edition
James R. Fisher, Jr.,
Ph.D.
© October 23, 2014
“Time is painted with
a lock before, and bald behind, signifying thereby that we must take time by
the forelock, for when it is once passed there is no recalling it.”
—Jonathan Swift (1667-1745), Irish satirist and author of “Gulliver’s
Travels”
This essay was first written in another form more than 40
years ago. The “afterword” and “after afterword” are new. They are written to
bridge the gap between yesterday and today, illustrating what experience has
taught me by looking back to see ahead.
My original reason for writing this essay was to stimulate
the conscience of ordinary souls like myself, not scholars, not dilettantes, not
specialists. I desired the reader to ponder things that had gotten in our way.
With that premise in mind, I made these assumptions:
The first assumption
is that I claim to be no authority, but write from my perceptions, reading, and
experience. Social critic Malcolm Muggeridge (1903-1990) stated it well: “If you want to write about life, the only
data you have is your own life. Take someone like Tolstoy. You can identify in his novels every
character. Serious writers use data of their own experience of living.”
The second assumption
is that we all have an interest in what makes people act the way they do. I am
trained in the social and behavioral sciences, yet echo psychologist philosopher
Sigmund Koch‘s ((1917-1996) caution: “Psychology
cannot be a coherent science.” Healthy skepticism is encouraged. I am simply
asking you to compare what is written here with what you are experiencing
today.
The third assumption
is that we are all born wonderers and therefore all philosophers. Contemporary
philosopher Alan Watts (1915-1973) captures this sentiment: “A philosopher is a sort of intellectual
yokel who gapes and stares at what sensible people take for granted, a person
who cannot get rid of the feeling that the barest of facts of everyday life are
unbelievably odd. Aristotle put it best: the beginning of philosophy is
wonder.”
The fourth assumption
is that we are all born storytellers. Our lives are the tapestry of great
novels. Each episode in that life is the fabric of a compelling short story.
The sharing of the story touches universal themes of a common humanity.
Everyone is kin to everyone else. No matter what the writer’s experience, it belongs
to the reader as well.
The fifth and final
assumption is that we are all selling something. From the moment we rise in the morning until
we lay our heads down on our pillow at night, we are selling our worth, ideas, and
our appeal to others. What follows then is a passion play of self in the
context of another time that seems remarkably like our present.
Today (2014) is an electrifying time to be alive with
challenge and opportunity competing with our limited time and energy. Are we in a cage of our own making, or are we
free to be all that we could become and can be? As you ponder this, think in
terms of psychological time. You will find once you make a decision, make a
choice, and make a commitment that the rest is anticlimactic, demonstrating
that you are in charge.
Clearly, we possess the equipment to produce miracles when so
often we stagnate and purchase misery instead. My wonder is if this is a
chronic illness embedded in our cultural DNA for which we have no escape. If
so, are we content to remain complacently stuck, or are we ready to become
unstuck? It is a matter of choice. Once the choice is made the mind and body,
indeed the spirit escapes its stuckness and soars beyond expectations. I know because
it happened to me.
* * *
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