University life is an insulated culture and impediment to
self-understanding as knowledge is the game and self-awareness has no place in
that curriculum. Conceptual knowledge (i.e., sacrosanct words and ideas) proves
a barrier rather than a vehicle to self-understanding, and maturity.
Consequently, the student is frozen in self-indulgent immaturity until released
from this environment be it after four, six, or more years of matriculation
unprepared for life and the reality of experience at the age of 22, 24, 26, or
older with the mindset of an 18-year-old.
The exception is the student who lives
off-campus, has a part-time job, and lives on his or her own, making decisions
with parents no longer the primary nurturer. It is students immersed in
university life, as are the faculty who think they see life clearly and can
pontificate liberal or righteous theories about existence when what they
experience is hardly that.
A Socratic professor told his student, “Forget
everything that you have been taught and you will be on your way to wisdom and
understanding.”
The student was astonished. “But why have I spent six years
developing my professional credentials?”
The professor replied, “Because that
knowledge will surface when you face the problems of your profession as an
adult. The knowledge is there in the reservoir of your understanding.”
The
professor paused and studied the young man. “Are you familiar with the Law of
the Reversed Effect?”
The student nodded, “No, what is that?”
“The harder you
try to succeed the less you do; the more you attempt to belong the less you are;
the more you attempt to relax the tenser you become; the more you concentrate
the less you see clearly what is right before your eyes.”
The student was now
totally confused. “What are you saying?”
“Let go of your mind, trust it for the
wisdom and understanding it possesses. The knowledge needed to solve your
problems is in the toolkit of your subconscious. Relax, let the mind slow down.
Take a pause. Quit thinking about what worked before, what you have been taught.
See not with your mind but with your mind’s eye. Remember, then is dead to the
now as concentration is the victim of the hypnotic mind.
“When knowledge is
substituted for wisdom, it is like beating a drum in search of a fugitive,
captive to a synthetic existence in a state of helplessness.”
Dirk and Harry
personify this state.