Jordan Peterson makes the case that we must accept and face our
dark side, and I agree. Whatever we manage well, we must first understand,
whether it's our car, kitty, or clothing. This also pertains to our lives. We
cannot manage our lives effectively until we can observe and understand them. We
not only need to know what is healthful to eat but also need to become aware of
our reactions. When we are aware of them, we can avoid situations that trigger
them and adversely impact others.
However, confronting our dark side requires us to go far deeper.
It’s also a matter of engaging our hidden thoughts and motivations, like
self-promotion and image management. Not until I became aware of how so much of
what I do was about winning the approval of others could I begin do something
about it.
However, the dark side contains more than hidden motivations.
It also involves our obsessive attempts to hide these motivations, even from
ourselves. We, therefore, need to probe the questions, “Why am I obsessively
hiding? What is it I refuse to face and why?” Instead, we have erected defensive barriers
that even a cockroach cannot penetrate.
There are many evidences that we strenuously refuse to face
the truth about ourselves and why we prefer the cover of darkness to the
revealing light of truth. It reminds me of how I look at myself in the mirror.
I seek to strike just the right pose with just the right lighting to make me
look my best. Here are just a few indications that we are running from the
truth:
1.
We can see other’s faults more clearly than our
own even though we are even aware of our thoughts.
2.
When we have an altercation, we are convinced
that it’s the other’s fault.
3.
We can’t take criticism. However, we if truly
practiced self-criticism, we wouldn’t become defensive about someone else’
criticism.
Why do we hide from ourselves? We just can't tolerate the
idea that we might not be good,
deserving, and worthy people. When we are accused of some wrong-doing, we
immediate go on the defensive. If we can't wiggle out of the charge, we try to
blame it on someone or something else. Even if someone charges us with merely
cutting into the line, we experience the immediate need to justify ourselves.
We rarely excuse ourselves by saying, "It just doesn't matter." It is
not simply that we have done wrong, but we also feel that we have done wrong.
We can't face the fact our righteous facade has been tarnished.
What makes us so defensive about our dark side? When
exposed, why can't we simply laugh it off? Powerful feelings like guilt, shame,
threat, and unworthiness, surround our dark side rendering it unapproachable.
We want to deny our dark side exists. How? By covering our
raw feelings, which tell us that there is something terribly the matter with
us, with achievements, power, popularity, appearance, and money in our endless quest
to prove ourselves good and worthy! This denial leads us into workaholism,
alcoholism, and even friendless-ness. Our façade of worthiness drives others
away.
Meanwhile, some go in the other direction and flaunt their
unworthiness. Still others resort to masochism to pay the price for their
unworthiness through self-harm. As a result, they might temporarily feel more
worthy.
I don't think that we can confront our dark side on our own,
not fully. We cannot make peace with it any more than with a pride of hungry
lions. The hidden side is simply too threatening and destabilizing. We can toy
with it and even feel that we have dealt successfully with it, but have we reached
its depth?
But isn't it harder to confront the feelings of guilt and
shame than to continually bury them? If it was easier, we would have naturally
resorted to this strategy. However, there is more at stake.
The reason that we are obsessively trying to prove ourselves
is that we know that there is something terribly wrong with us that resists self-modification.
Perhaps the masochist can sense this problem most accurately. They punish
themselves because they know that they deserve
punishment.
Perhaps unconsciously, we all know that we deserve
punishment. We chronically fall short of our own moral standards, and the more
sensitive among us feel horrible about their failures. Consequently, we strive
to compensate for them. We leave generous tips, join volunteer programs, and
even allow ourselves to be abused. Meanwhile, our inner script tells us that we
deserve it.
The Bible testifies to this truth in many ways. Jesus
claimed that we hide from the light because we cannot tolerate its exposure of
our sins, our dark side:
·
And this is the judgment: the light has come
into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because
their works were evil. For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and
does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed. (John 3:19-20)
Modern man’s denial of freewill, judgement, culpability, and
objective moral values doesn’t work. These changes of worldview are no less
superficial than a change in clothing. The problem lies at our inner core. We
know that we are guilty and deserve condemnation, and no amount of successes or
positive affirmations will change this:
·
Though they know God’s righteous decree that
those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but give
approval to those who practice them. (Romans 1:32)
This is ground-zero. We sense that we are under a guilty
verdict. Consistently, wherever we look, we find that mankind is still trying to
prove their worth and innocence, no matter how successful they have become.
Meanwhile, we know that we are
sinners who need the Savior and His free gift of forgiveness and life (Romans
6:23). Everything else is window-dressing.
However, there is hope. Our Lord presents us with an open
invitation:
·
Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden,
and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am
gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke
is easy, and my burden is light.” (Matthew 11:28-30)
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