Toys of the Mind?
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
REFERENCE:
Excerpt
from The Worker, Alone! Going Against the
Grain (2015, expanded Second Edition of 1995 original).
THE
CHALLENGE OF LEARNING!
Workers
in my experience have inert minds, minds on automatic pilot. They learn by
rote, or from a particular person, curriculum, or doctrine; from an exceptional
teacher, coach or preacher, or from specific books. They fail, in the main, to
learn from their own observations and actions; from their own unique set of
life experiences.
The
result is that many workers imitate the experience of others. They strive for
identity and recognition through conformity, competition and copycatting.
They
seem unwilling to struggle for identity. The only way true identity and
recognition can be achieved is through self-discovery and experience, not by
imitating the styles and behaviors of others.
The
tremendous burden of attempting to always please others, both personally and
professionally, and then to live up to their expectations, has made many
workers’ minds extraordinarily dull.
After
decades of turbulent discord within themselves, festering conflict with others,
tiring accommodation, punishing doubt, plus the constant agony of imitation,
many workers feel cut off from life, adrift and without anchor.
Through
this maddening process of attempting to be like everyone else, many have become
second or third-hand persons to themselves. They are always quoting somebody
else, never mustering the courage to consider or voice an original thought or opinion.
They check pollsters, as if heuristic box scores, to see if they are “thinking
right,” terrified at the thought they might be outside the prevailing norm.
Their consumer choices, dictated by a cadre of experts, compel them to support
the “best” films, books, automobiles, neighborhoods, cities, diets, mates,
exercises, stocks, ad infinitum.
Taste is designed by a committee with the lowest common denominator in mind.
When
workers are disappointed, they can blame the experts in which they placed their
confidence, for the choices were never their own. This brings to the surface an
elusive problem.
If
the choices made are not considered the worker’s, it is not in the cards for
them to learn from their mistakes. Instead, like the terminally immature, they
can claim no responsibility for their behavior.
They were just doing what they
were told.
Identity
and recognition thus become disingenuous, while their actions become clones of
someone else’s agenda. Rented minds never
act like home owners.
Alas,
I suspect such minds pervade the climate of the home, job, school and
community. A poverty of will and a concession to helplessness defines the
identity of many such workers.
Life’s
hard rule is that everyone is responsible for their own actions, and to learn
from the consequences of those actions. Everyone gets a report card on their
performance every day of their life.
Workers
can be male, female, dark or light, tall or short, fat or trim, young or old,
American or Armenian, Indian or Indonesian, life’s flow is the same. Movement
is similar. Every worker’s destiny, whatever it is, depends on observations in
school, work, and play and in daily pursuits.
Discipline
is not conformity. Discipline involves a mind alert to its own actions — a
living mind. Conformity implies conflict between “what is” and “what should
be.” Conforming to certain prevailing ideologies, social norms and societal
“truths,” truths to which everyone supposedly subscribes without reflection,
seeds conflict.
A
discriminating mind cannot absorb what makes little sense. Such a mind must
probe and weigh the merits of what is professed against what is experienced.
With conflict, there is always friction and the dissipation of energy. Workers
can be so absorbed in the conflict that they are not conscious of reality. The result
is then confusion.
Each
worker must put his own house in order, because no one else is going to do it
for him. A mind in disorder peers out at
the world through an opaque window, unable to see the beauty and balance of
nature. The window holds confusion in and beauty and the delight of other
people out.
Most
workers within my experience are consumed with the distractions of either toys
or careers. For them, life is without beauty or order. It is a constant grind,
day in and day out. “I work hard and play hard,” they proclaim, failing to
realize the implicit absurdity in this boast. They have learned the art of
moral evasion.
Yet
beauty, not wealth or security, is a delight and it is free!
The
spirit withdrawn into itself and out of sight, may not be completely destroyed,
but it could go blind in that pervasive internal darkness.
What
is valued is not always what is precious. As Shakespeare puts it: “To wilful men, the injuries that they
themselves procure must be their schoolmaster’s.” Indeed!
A
paternalistic society knows the value of toys, but not necessarily the essence
of beauty. Give a child having a tantrum a complicated toy, and the child is
absorbed, distracted from its anguish, quiet.
The child enjoys the mechanics of discovery and is focused, involved
completely with the toy. All mischief dissolves.
Such
a society gives workers the toys of technology, the toys of ideals and the toys
of beliefs to absorb their discontent. Some toys are treated as sacred
(religious doctrines, rites and rituals), others as profane (pop culture),
still others as precedence (national holidays).
Tradition
as toy assures the maintenance of the company pecking order. No one disputes
the CEO.’s omnipotence. Other toys are status symbols: money, stately homes,
expensive automobiles, socio-economic status, knowledge…
Workers
come to venerate ideals, beliefs, policies, customs, norms and hierarchical
relationships without reflection. “It is
the way it has always been, so it must be right.” These come to be accepted
as “truths,” to which the majority subscribe, when they are simply “toys of the
mind.”
They
are all inventions of thought and therefore flawed. Even so, some treat them as
absolute truths, when there are no such things. There are no absolute truths,
only a welter of contradictory truths embodied in the worker’s imaginary self.
This imaginary self is likely to form his “character.” And character is but a mixed
bag of relative truths which each worker may call his own.
Psychic
toys are proliferating at an alarming rate. Still, they are seldom essential,
more apt to be vain accumulations of gibberish and nonsense. The potpourri of psychic toys a society is reluctant
to “let go of” doesn’t make them less real, but it does make them more sacrosanct.
Psychic
toys are now increasingly in the way. But workers have yet to develop a sense
of humor about these toys, especially when they are no longer appropriate.
Take
smartphones for example; better yet take them away from young people and see
the reaction. These magic tools/toys have
become gods to them. So, to take them
away is tantamount to messing with their religion.
Legitimate
tools as toys have their purpose, and that purpose is mostly as distraction. When workers are absorbed in toys, like a
child, they are extraordinarily quiet and obedient to the demands of these
toys.
The
toys may be concepts, special interests, or “things,” such as smartphones, cell
phones, laptops, computers, technologies, automobiles, boats, houses, planes,
athletics, hobbies, the worker’s own persona or profession.
Stated
another way, when legitimate tools become obsessional recreational diversions,
they cease being instrumentally valuable and become terminal values competing
with love, duty, devotion, and intimacy; in other words, toys, or escape from
reality.
Wealth
or ambition are also toys of the mind
when they are viewed exclusively in a miser’s sense, and not in an
other-directed sense or what they can do for others. The list of toys of the mind is endless, but the
results are always the same. The toys absorb and distract the worker from the
chaos of “what is,” to the appeasing pleasure of denial and selective
forgetting.
With
effective distraction, there is the absence of self. There is no need to think,
experience, problem solve or learn. For the moment, the worker is totally
controllable. He differs little with the greyhound at the race track who chases
the mechanical rabbit, or the rodent who wanders through the maze for the
promised piece of cheese. The Holy Grail of this anxious age is the perfect toy
to seduce the worker’s restless spirit into compliant behavior.
Should
the reader think this is a recent challenge, Roman philosopher Seneca (4 B.C. -
65 A.D.) observed: “Most powerful is he
who has himself in his own power.” That is not likely with the constant
subliminal bombardment of toys of distractions.
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