Spinoza’s god is the Nihilist-Solipsist god is the Egoless-Subconscious Self

Yeah, yeah, yeah.  Not the the pithiest title for an entry, I know.  But it will have to do for now.

As a child at the age sometime before turning the age of awkward I recall developing a sense of how I ought to process the world.  In reality, I suspect my (overly) analytic mind was attempting to build for itself a model of itself, a “Who am I that is I?” kind of doubly redundant kind of query.  Maybe a question only an overly analytic, self-absorbed child such as myself would find worth any consideration.  In many ways I was trying to determine how to learn and absorb the world.  I discovered very early in my childhood that thinking during the act of doing produced poor results; I instead discovered that if I could push whatever I had from my conscious mind to my subconscious mind I could very quickly assimilate a skill with a certain amount of prodigal finesse: I try not to think what I am doing, I just try to do what I am doing.  In this manner I had stumbled upon, in a very cursory way, ideas such as ego, ID, self-awareness, consciousness and subconsciousness.

In this time I also came up with a question about god’s self-awareness, or: “Does god know it is god?”  For whatever reason I did not then nor now believe god, whatever it may be, knows of its role; it just is.  By definition, self-awareness is predicated on being conscious.  If you think of god being aware of all things at all times then a conscious god does not make a lot of sense to me.  Consciousness is a pinpoint of coherent thought, the biological version of a laser.  God, the way we might envision it, needs to be bath of light in order to everywhere at all times, the very opposite of consciousness; namely, god is by definition and my way of thinking subconscious and ergo not self-aware.

I actually think the conscious mind is too oft over-emphasized in this age and culture.  What do I mean by this?  Let me try to answer my own self-stated question by addressing the question of what is art.  Art is simply the act of self-expression.  Art is the expression of self in context to the perceived world.  In this way it is no hard thing to say: Art is Life; Life is Art.  In this manner everything I (we) do is art.  Every word.  Every gesture.  Every thought.  Every conversation.  Nothing is outside the purview of art and artistic (self) expression.  If we step back into the world of art that most people understand and attribute to the noun, the act of creating by hand or taking with camera is far more an act of getting the conscious self out of the way so the subconscious mind can discover a truth, can express itself.  An artist will describe to you that something does not “feel right”, they will pace and look at the work from various angles, all while perturbed that something does not fit.  It is the act of problem-solving, there is a final solution somewhere in there but it takes time to discover the path to it.  It is a solution that has no meaningful, originating question, though.  The solution is just a link in an infinite series; the solution itself will just breed more “questions” that lead to more “solutions”, a never-ending quest when the quest is the everything and the (final) destination is the nothing.  In a word: the conscious mind has words to express itself; the subconscious mind has everything else.

God, if were to be everywhere all at once working through us, feels no different to me than my subconscious mind.  In SAT and GRE-like analogy, my body of life is to the universe as my subconscious mind is to god.  And thus Spinoza’s god is the Nihilist-Solipsist god is the egoless-subconscious self.

I Am My World

It may be that I, now after having started back up the slopes toward the philosopher’s hut, find myself in the company of those with hypochondria.  More than a few will go as far to self-inflect in some sado-masochistic bout of irony to read medical volumes in order to find every illness possibly inflicting them.  In like vein, I might be accused of subscribing to major schools of philosophy that seem remotely related to my own mental states.  I recall a roommate in college who took courses in psychology in order to have access to academic journals in order that he could attribute bizarro mental states to his own being with the panache of an accredited psychologist.  It is easy for a lay-person to overly attribute some deeply academic theory or set of thinking to a condition when, at best, the label we attach includes far more than we might ever understand it to convey.  On this point, when I write that I am Solipsist or even a Nihilist then recognize that I am ascribing to myself attributes in these schools of thought that I do so as a lay-person with all the generalities and (over-) simplifications this entails.  But I am getting ahead of myself.

When Descartes wrote “(dubito ergo) cogito ergo sum”, or “(I doubt therefore) I think therefore I am” we may see this in the light in which we are cast or in the light which the statement was cast.  It is not that I am not interested in this histories surrounding René per se; but, no matter how much I might delve into such matters I acknowledge I cannot fully extricate myself from my own understanding of these said matters.  This last sentence, if you are paying attention, is with no undue amount a nodding of head to the Solipsist in me.  Therefore, because I recognize the butchery that will result if I attempt to understand the latter, I will chop it off  from further topic to leave us but one leg in the former light, as it were.  Whether we will remain standing by the end remains to be seen.  Back to Descartes.  His words stand as both bulwark to and clarion call of the intellectual human for whom (rational) thought triumphs supreme over their world.  But we must also come to recognize that his is the Solipsist clarion call, its ringing of our prison cell slamming closed on us.  Our thoughts are our everything: our world, our universe, our god, our us.  There is nothing else; we only exist, our world we perceive only exists, because we think we do.

Why bring up any of this?  I am certainly not a philosopher and thus have nothing substantive to add to those more qualified than I to comment on that many natures of Solipsism.  But in my past year’s reading of various philosophical texts (e.g. Nietzsche’s The Anti-Christ(ian); Plato’s Apology, Republic and Sophist), scientific texts (e.g. Richard Dawkin’s The Selfish Gene and The God Delusion; David Reznick’s The Origin Then and Now: An Interpretive Guide to the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin; Michio Kaku’s Physics of the Impossible and Hyperspace) and literary fiction that ascribes to bring story and structure to philosophical ideas (e.g. David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest; Herman Hesses’s Steppenwolf) there was more than enough source material for me to come to articulate a new position I found myself in; namely, that the singular state of self is our only alpha (beginning) and omega (end), and more so we only need ourselves to discover true happiness.  As Solipsist I do not take the strong form of believing nothing exists beyond my perceptions.  However, I only trust what I perceive as true.  This nuance might be expressed as: I cannot know what you know, only know what I perceive you to know.  As Nihilist I do not believe life has any intrinsic purpose other than to be born, live (, procreate), and die; our lives boil down to natural selection.  Even free will does not exist external to the self to be handed down by some supernatural being; regardless, I do unflinchingly and with no irony argue that we must take free will on faith as axiom to be true.  Finally, because of these two I then come as Atheist.  I do not ascribe to any belief in any supernatural beings, gods or GOD or God.  In sum, for me there is nothing more to this life than myself, for I am “god” to my world of one.

I am not here to per se defend my position since, as you will see, I do not believe I need to defend it, nevertheless I will try to explain it.  But before I proceed let me quickly summarize much of my “philosophy” of life up to the age of 36.  First principle: I believed in unconditional love.  Second principle: I believed that judging others in any shape or form was to be avoided.  Thirdly, I believed I was a fundamentally broken human being; I literally believed I was emotionally, spiritually, physically sub-human: to wit, not of the species homo sapiens.  Fourth, counter to third I believed I could do anything or at least intellectually comprehend anything (The Little Engine That Could was read by me obsessively and compulsively as a child).  Fifth, I was raised in a fundamentalist Protestant environment that taught by application of fear and Fear of my eternal suffering for any rejection or rebuff of God or Jesus Christ.  Sixth, contrary to my introverted nature I was guilted into believing that every waking moment should be spent spending time with human beings.  Seventh, the parenting I received included negative reinforcement on a regular basis and comically absurd indifference or irrational attachment.  Add this all up in a cocktail, hand to a borderline autistic child with extreme bouts of introversion to quaff down for three decades on a daily basis and you get one very disturbed and self-conflicting person.  In short, because I believed I could not judge others and because I needed to love unconditionally I saw any and all external incompatibles with my own nature as fundamentally due to my own nature.  I could never see that I and another were not compatible with each other; I saw the incompatibility is solely resting in me.  This inability to see reality only reinforced my belief that I was fundamentally broken, overtime cementing with bedrock certainty my un-humanity [sic].  Additionally, due to my religious upbringing and in spite of my renouncing it over two decades ago I still framed this kind of life as my own “living purgatory”; I had to prove to “God” my worth as a loving being.  Sadly, whenever I failed to love another or whenever they rejected me it only fueled me to try again, but this time a bit more cracked and crazed about finding my redemption in others.  In trying to love others I forgot how to love myself.  To say I lived a life of near perpetual spiritual, emotional and physical pain is not nearly the overstatement I wish it were.

As I have written before, my world collapsed in my 35th year and by the time I turned 36 my fall was complete.  From this fall my ascent back into sanity was, ironically enough, predicated on me becoming “more me”.  I have since learned to sit squarely and comfortably on my haunches and resoundingly within the marrow of my bones.  What initiated this discovery that I needed to be more me began when I recognized all my failures revolved around centers of power.  In every instance, the solution was to bring the locus of power back inside of myself.  This, of course, also meant I needed to take more and more responsibility for my actions and my perception of my world.  While we can talk about empowerment, I learned the key is to learn to effectively apply my very limited resources (time and energy) to realize the greatest benefit.  For the frank reality I am neither omniscient nor omnipotent.  Amongst all this, it may be with irony that I refer you to the prayer of serenity as a source of profound wisdom.  One of the strongest and most virulent walls that blocked me from empowering myself was my ascribing to my situation one of being a victim.  I am not a victim.  No one can hurt me.  No one can belittle me.  No one can judge me.  And conversely, no one can make me happy.  I do these things to myself.  I do these things for myself.

Life is, in large part, a matter of perspective.  By way of analogy, I am but a mere, small pollen sitting atop an infinitely running river; my gross movements are utterly beyond our ability to influence it, I can only operate locally to shift my position.  From the scale of the river any change by the pollen is undetectable; but, from the scale of the pollen it is life-size.  Again, turning back to my childhood I was reared in a household where people exercised control over their environments through external manipulation and control.  It was a world filled with the word “should”; a word I believe a truer murderer than the appeal of Hamlet’s ghost: “murder most foul”, indeed.  My allergy to the word “should” stems from its implications of criticality, judgement and pending recrimination.  The application of judgement outside the very limited confines of jurisprudence is at best meaningless and worst harmful in the most foul manner.  I believe we judge others as a means of trying to control our external world, forcing it to adopt to our short-comings rather than we to it.  The act of judgement is the act of the pollen trying to bend the course of the river.  Stepping back a little to provide framework, it may be humbling, even humiliating to someone to accept they have absolutely no meaningful control over most of their life.  Just by raw numbers we are all a force of one at the mercy of six billion homo sapiens.  And of course, by weight and in comparison to total biological mass that exists on this planet the entire human race in total is only a small fraction of the whole.  Compound to this a lifespan of seventy-five years to the current span of all time — some thirteen billion years — and we are all at best a mere speck of pollen indeed.

One of the unfortunate take-aways, as it were, of my last marriage is that it left me with a life-long infection that is transmittable to my sexual partners.  While the infection will not kill me nor anyone else, it has irrevocably changed my social landscape and thus my oft said quip that I am a “celibate monk.”  I simply can no longer afford the casual flippancy that myself and most of my generation has applied to sexual relationships.  And while it has made it at times challenging, it nevertheless has been one of the deepest blessings of my life.  I can no longer afford not only casual sexual relationships but also casual relationships (given the sexual promiscuity that is mainstream in my generation).  Why is this good?  I married two of those casual relationships and subsequently got divorced; and therefore my point is that this condition has demanded I think deeply about who I am and who I want to spend my time with.  I am not immune to loneliness and certainly I, like many others, have used relationships as a salve to cover the loneliness we feel.  I can say with utter frankness that both my previous wives and myself each vocalized the belief that one benefit of our marriage would that it would rid us of our feelings of loneliness.  It never did; it actually compounded our loneliness.  We went from lonely and single to married believing we should not be lonely.  To discover loneliness under these false expectations is to amplify the pain.  Regardless, this infection that demands my celibacy and which I begrudgingly accept has nonetheless allowed me to find a peace and happiness I do not believe I could have otherwise.  Belatedly as it might, I finally came to realize everything I feel, everything I perceive, everything I am is conditional on one thing and one thing only:  me.   Once I discovered that I was the core to my everything I began the arduous task of removing, whenever and wherever possible, any and all attachments to external dependencies.  In short, I no longer look without myself to be happy.  At first I feared that I was retreating into myself, shutting out the world though a course of disconnection.  Whereas I suspected my ego would overwhelm me, I instead discovered I had to eradicate my ego; there is simply not enough room for it.  In particular, I found my ego consistently getting in the way of me being an empathetic person.  My ego led me to lash out at people, my ego led me to defend myself in spite of my failings and prevented me from growing and maturing.  I now find myself detached to a degree and in a manner that I am, ironically enough, more connected and more able to care than ever before.  I find I love more deeply and more truly because I am unfettered by feelings of guilt, obligation, duty, recrimination, subservience, domination, self-loathing and all the rest of the baggage I often heaped upon myself.  The whole of who I am, as much as I can allow myself, is under my management.  When I extend myself to another human being I am doing so with most of energies directed toward that singular act; I am no longer being sapped by all the other secondary connections I would have in the past been trying to maintain and satisfy.

I suspect people might find my view of the world lonely, depressing, or even horrifying.  I know that many people feel the same after coming to terms with natural selection.  Darwinism tells us that there is no motive other than what comes from the “the selfish gene”, that even our conscious self is a mere consequence of genetic survival.  Add to this that there is no personal god interested in the affairs of this universe or our lives and a person might feel that is not much left in the way of life.  (Though I can and do make exception for Spinoza’s or Einstein’s god; a philosophically constructed entity useful, even beneficial, to the human psyche but no more supernatural than god’s creator, man.)  As a teenager I vocally rejected all of my religious upbringing and declared that Science was my belief, my Religion — a misuse of the word “religion” meant to emphasis a symmetric break and not to meant convey that I thought Science is Religion.  When I returned from Japan I had discovered Buddhism and declared that the meaning of Life was Life itself.  However, the boy returning as man from his Japanese bildungsroman some twenty years ago had not been sufficiently tempered by life to appreciate how fleeting everything is, even his then precarious understanding of some of these deep truths.  Now, twenty years later his future self, my now I, writes knowing with utter confidence that our shared future self of some sixty years will again look back to reaffirm his discovery of self.  I am sure I will struggle to remember in my bones what I am sharing with you now.  It is the nature of things for us to circle back continuously on the wisdoms in our life that we learn and then forget and then learn again anew.  But in the meantime I am happy to be alone with no god but myself so that I might live a life and to love the people who want me in their lives.

Changes

I feel that on the change from 2010 to 2011 a need to comment on things.  There were two (2) songs in the summer of 1985 that awakened in me an appreciation for the art of the lyric.  First was Queen’s Fat Bottomed Girls for the sheer audacity, at least to me at that age, of a song that was so blatantly non-sensically sexually and frankly just plain fun to listen to for its irreverent, sanguine tribute to, well, fat-bottomed girls.  Simultaneous to all things Queen was in equal parts a dose of David Bowie’s and his album Hunky Dory.  Of the songs on that album it was first “Life on Mars” and the girl with the mousy hair that sunk into my subconscious as a song of notable lyrics.  Nevertheless, the album itself opened me up to listening to not just the music also the song, to the lyrics in and of themselves.  And so, as we move into a new year I am reminded of one such song, or:

I still don’t know what I was waiting for
And my time was running wild
A million dead-end streets
Every time I thought I’d got it made
It seemed the taste was not so sweet
So I turned myself to face me
But I’ve never caught a glimpse
Of how the others must see the faker
I’m much too fast to take that test”

– David Bowie, Changes

2010 was a year of many changes.  I found myself again alone after a second sudden divorce; and, I found that I was not a victim even if I was the great source of my own misery.   I found I could finally wake up from my childhood dreams.  I found myself somehow seemingly 100 pounds lighter than I have been in nearly two decades and also in the best shape of my nearly four decades.  I discovered the single most important activity I do on a daily basis is to share a meal with the people I love.  I rediscovered a passion for my artwork, not to mention a new found passion for photography (blatant plug to show you heart me on Facebook).  I discovered that traveling is more than just a stamp on my passport, but a real and serious part of my excess resources, both time and otherwise.  I discovered work is just, well, work even if I love it when I am there to clock in my nominal 40-hours.  I discovered there is a deep magic in the world if we but keep ourselves open and even if she was just passing through on her own travels.  I discovered I have a deep, undying belief that my soul-mate and I will discover each other.  And while I am waiting for her, I discovered that being alone is not a formula for be lonely even if not loving myself is.  Mostly though, I discovered that nothing is permanent; wait long enough and anything and everything will change.

Hungry, Hungry Hobbies

In a seemingly different life I dimly recall the sage words of another.

Hobby is the intent of a (leisure) life; work is but
means to an ends: we work that we might hobby.”
— me, now

Since graduating high school I forgot how much I love my art. My writing. My reading. My fiddle. My Japanese. My photography.  In the past few years it is has been a small renaissance of sorts for myself to rediscover all these things all over again.  I have for now called myself Traveler, not just traveler: explorer of the world around and in myself.  But I could replace Traveler with Hobbyist and might still come to the same consensus: my hobby is my life, life as art (as cliché and trite as that might seem, might actually be).

I once thought that by developing myself professionally I would make myself a content and complete individual.  (Work, marriage and all things external will never make a person happy, but this is for different time.)  Work is not necessarily, of course, drudgery; but, that is, at its barest, the beginning and end of it all: Work is work.  Work is but a single aspect of our lives; a single dimension of a life that is infinite in its dimensions. There is a value in learning to cope in this environment, but in and of itself work is less rewarding than the Puritan-Protestant upbringing would have led me to believe.  For the vast majority of us, work is a borne necessity; this I get and do not argue; but, it is with more than a mere thimble full of humility that I have learned the limitations of work and more so learned that there is far, far more to life than work.

I suspect that our hobbies are a truer determination of who we are, of what we truly value.  Certainly work can and does compensate us in times when nothing more than professionalism and discipline drive us to complete the task; but, hobbies give us neither salary nor security.  Hobbies are opportunities to do something for the sheer joy of it.  Hobbies do not require us to consider if we are professionally competent or sufficiently skilled to be financially compensated for our work.  Hobbies do not require quarterly reviews to determine our progress or our title or qualification for promotion.  Hobbies do not need last longer than they are satisfying; there is no penalty for leaving them for years at a time when they no longer suit us.  Hobbies give us nothing more than a deepening of ourselves; their greatest wealth, at their core, is their pursuit of ourselves through them.  I heart my hobbies; I hunger my hobbies.

Magic of Thirty and Seven

Today I am thirty and seven years old.

I doubt even to a bored numerologist it adds up to much; but, to me it sums to a most precious number.  A number I had some doubts I would be able to count on.  When I was a child I came to believe through a long series of dreams that I would die when I was thirty and six years old.  Silly, really.  Who still believes well into their adult years in the dreams they had as a child?  Certainly not the person writing this here now.  But a part of him, a part of me, believes it or at least believed it might be true.  Call it one of my inner children: he still believed.  Was it probable that my death was foretold in my dreams from childhood?  Probable?  Not at all.  However.  Is it possible?  Yes, oh pity yes, it is possible!  Anything is possible.  Oh! such an infinitesimally small crack that is, is it not?  Possible.  Possible, it is enough to crack wide anyone’s grasp of reality.  It has been a year both lived as best as I know how, but also a year secretly wondering if this is the year a door, my door, closes.

This all began more years ago than I care to comment on; but, by age eight this reality had been seeded deep.  In those dreams I was forever 36 years old.  In those dreams all things centered on the end of the world in its many and varied forms.  In those dreams it was always I that ended the world; my hands were its destroyer.  In those dreams in the end I always died.  At some point, as I grew older, I understood all this to be merely the dreams of a troubled youth.  But that was some ten years after it all began.  In the years it took me to recognize this the thought of death was already planted deeper than I wished (and wish) to admit.  Especially in my younger years the dreams came to me with such rapidity and regularity that I thought they were the only things I ever dreamed of.  There was no other dreams.  Just those dreams.  There was for a time that they replaced my waking world’s reality as if every night as I closed my eyes I was actually awakening to my true world, a world where I came to destroy it and then die.  And when I died in that world only then could I open my eyes and go to sleep in this world, till the next night when I would destroy all over again.

These things have a way of snaking themselves into the subconscious, twisting things around till they become something more than mere dream: they came to be my believed destiny.  It is maybe why I believe so strongly in free will and why I feel it necessary to damn Fate.  How else could I have finally escaped those dreams then to believe more than in anything that my life is not at the mercy of anything than my own decisions: I decided back then to live; to not die.  But when you believe something as strongly and as deeply as I did for as long as I did, I suspect it must have changed me, warped and cracked me even.  I also suspect that I will never be able to fully comprehend the extent of these changes in me.  I only know that I was changed by them; I am changed by them.  I eventually let go of the idea that I would someday destroy the world.   That is an easy one to dismiss: me as the destroyer of our world.  But I was never able to completely dismiss that I might be the destroyer of my world.  Why could I not be my own destroyer?  I identified directly with  King Lear in large part because the tragedy of Lear who wants to be loved but does not know how to is a mirror to my own self-image; I wanting to love and be loved yet always seeming to fail utterly at it.  Which is to say, there is a part of me that never quite let go of the seed of an idea that my dreams were harbringer of my own doom.

The tick and tock of the clock has brought me ever closer to today.  In this last year, in some ways, my world did end.  It was not for the first time I found myself alone at the end of a sudden divorce.  But unlike the first divorce, I was able to admit to the sobering truth that it ended at my own hands.  No relationship is as black and white that blame can laid at one pair of feet, we both contributed to our demise.  But I played my part as co-destroyer of a beautiful life with a most beautiful person.  Sitting amongst the ruins of a life, once I put aside ego and discarded self-denial, I discovered something precious.  Maybe it was not so much a discovery as it was that I allowed myself the courage to love myself; the compassion to forgive myself.  Just as I learned to forgive myself, I also learned to accept myself.  I also learned that all realities must be allowed to co-exist.  I had to accept my now ex-wife’s reality that I was an unforgivable, damnable person even as I found the courage to forgive myself.  In the end, I coexist next to my contradictions of myself.  We do not cancel each other, we only strengthen and broaden who I am in this world; all these realities are valid parts of who I am.  I also discovered that all of these realities must be honored and accepted, and all the while I must never lose my faith in my humanity.  This meant, as odd as it may seem to be, that I had to accept my childhood dreams as both a possibility and as a delusion.  Denying this insanity, as it were, was not an option; to deny those dreams was to deny who I am.  It is my reality even if it all but a mere dream in my head.

So I did the one thing I am know best.  I dusted myself off and walked toward the pain.  I embraced who I am (and am not), delusions and all.  This past year I named the Year of Ward for reasons rather more humorously macabre than the cheery reasons I told others.  I traveled to say goodbye to the places and people precious to me; I traveled to say hello to the people and places dear to me.  I tried to squeeze every ounce out of my time, spending as much as time as could be afforded with the people I love including myself.  I tried to give myself the gift of life.  It has been 36 years, much of it wondering if this was the year.  It seems it was not to be.  At least not this year.  There is always time enough to die someday.  But not today.  I only hope that in the coming 36 years I find a long line of doors to open: from the year of Ward to the life of Ward.  Word.

MAZEL TOV.