What is it that makes us human? I think that an essential
part of it is our quest for social validation and approval. Consequently, we
are like sponges soaking up social cues and responses. It is a little like
driving a car. We automatically soak up the optical stimuli to form objective
pictures of the world around us.
We do not want imaginary pictures of our world. While
imagination has its place, in a car, it will lead to a wreck. Instead, we need
accuracy.
When it comes to our social and moral pictures we naturally and
obsessively construct of the world, we also crave accuracy. To flow comfortably
through our social environment, is like navigating successfully through
traffic.
As we grow older, we begin to form mental constructs of
ourselves in relation to the surrounding world. We not only need accurate
mental constructs of the world, we also need an accurate definition of
ourselves in relationship to the world. We seek to answer the questions, “who
am I?” and “how should I behave?” It’s part of what it means to be human.
After we emerge from the womb of our parent’s house, we
begin to add other questions: “What makes me a good, significant, and
worthwhile person?” and “Why am I here?” For some of us, the nest is so
uncomfortable that we begin to ask this question earlier. For others, this
question hasn’t ever penetrated our consciousness. However, in either case, the
question is still there and needs to be answered, although we will find
different ways to answer this question and to fulfill this need.
In “The Significant
Life,” George M. Weaver illustrates that we are so crazed to achieve
significance, or at least name recognition, that we will commit acts that bring
us condemnation rather than commendation:
·
In 2005 Joseph Stone torched a Pittsfield,
Massachusetts apartment building… After setting the blaze, Stone rescued
several tenants from the fire and was hailed as a hero. Under police questioning,
Stone admitted, however, that he set the fire and rescued the tenants because,
as summarized at trial by an assistant district attorney, he “wanted to be
noticed, he wanted to be heard, he wanted to be known.” (44)
Evidently, our quest for significance is so powerful that it
can overrule the moral dictates of conscience. One mass-murderer gunman
explained in his suicide note, “I’m going to be f_____ famous.” (45)
This drive for significance can even override all other
affections. On December 8, 1980, Mark David Chapman, a zealous fan of the
Beatle, John Lennon, first obtained his idol’s autograph before gunning him
down. He explained:
·
“I was an acute nobody. I had to usurp someone
else’s importance, someone else’s success. I was ‘Mr. Nobody’ until I killed
the biggest Somebody on earth.” At his 2006 parole hearing, he stated: “The
result would be that I would be famous, the result would be that my life would
change and I would receive a tremendous amount of attention, which I did
receive… I was looking for reasons to vent all that anger and confusion and low
self-esteem.” (47)
By attaching himself to someone greater, Chapman elevated
himself. Was it “low self-esteem” or merely Chapman’s own way to achieve what
everyone else is trying to achieve – significance and self-validation?
Although we might attempt to fulfill this need in
anti-social, even self-destructive ways, it seems that it is a basic human
need. The late and esteemed rabbi, Abraham Heschel, had claimed that our needs also
include finding understanding and meaning:
·
It’s not enough for me to be able to say ‘I am’;
I want to know who I am and in relation to whom I live. It is not enough for me
to ask questions; I want to know how to answer the one question that seems to
encompass everything I face: What am I here for?
As the salmon “knows” to return to the place where it had
been born to create more young, we too sense that there is a role we must
fulfill and a place where we belong. However, the search for our spawning-ground
can become obsessive and frustrating if we are unable to find it.
We might even despair and give up the search. We might even
conclude that the spawning-ground for which we search is mythical or completely
subjective. Or it might simply be that we had started buttoning our shirt in
the wrong hole, condemning every subsequent button into the wrong slot – the cause
of our frustration. Some will eventually re-button their shirt, starting with
the right hole, while others will never go back to the start. It’s just too
painful to face the fact that we have been in error about everything.
However, decades of depression and panic attacks drove me
back to my first button. I had been obsessively trying to re-position the top
buttons with little success, and it was obvious. My life just didn’t work, I
was suffering, and there was no denying it.
I had been like a sponge, soaking up whatever social or
material feedback that might enable me to successfully navigate this painful
existence, but wherever I looked, I couldn’t find the place where I belonged.
This led me to Israel, where I became a Zionist. It then led to seek for the
perfect community among Israel’s many kibbutzim where I would be loved and
validated, but no such place was able to answer my questions or meet my
inflamed needs.
It was only some years later, as I was bleeding to death
from a chainsaw injury, that my buttons were torn away from the holes where I
had deposited them. God was there as I lay in a pool of my own blood,
manifesting Himself with such love, joy, and peace that I was ecstatic. Nothing
else mattered. I just knew that I had to find Him to discover His identity,
convinced beyond doubting that this was the place I belonged, that He was the
One who had given birth to me and it was to Him that I must return.
I was afraid that this might be about Jesus, the last place
I had ever dreamed of visiting. However, 41 years ago, I became convinced that
He is my significance, validation, and my home, the very place I belong. It is
from Him that I have come forth; it is to Him that I return.
No comments:
Post a Comment