Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Are we there yet?


“The future is no place to place your better days,” – Dave Matthews (Cry Freedom)

As we go through life we look to set mile markers down at various points – places/times and events that are turning points for us.  Some represent turning for the better and some represent turning for the worse.  As we grow older we can look back on those markers and discern a trend.  For taken together, those markers form the thread of your life.  It is the discernment of that trend that allows for significant self-awareness, and that self-awareness is the key to making wise choices in your future.

Some events are so huge that they are obvious.  Some are not – they are seen only in hindsight.  Others are deliberate – like the day you finally got serious about your diet/exercise/education/whatever and purposed to change/improve.  

The same can be said of society as a whole, but discerning which events are key and which are simply random is a lot harder, because society as a whole does not have a single mind to reflect on the entire frame of reference.  Aside from ‘mass’ events (such as an election or a major disaster), it is only in hindsight – as we look at history – that we can even try to pick out those days/events that set the course of our society on a particular path. 

Nevertheless, there are some events that signal points in trends that individuals can pick out merely by being observant.  Perhaps though, you don’t even need to be particularly observant to notice that our times seem to be spirally steadily downward.  Most days you pick up the news and read of at least one tragic incident, but this week there were three shocking stories of human beings doing absolutely horrific things to each other that I think mark a new low point in western society.

In Florida, a naked man is shot to death while literally chewing off the face of another naked (and alive) man on a highway on-ramp. 
In Syria, their own government hires thugs who systematically massacre over 100 civilians, most of them women and children.
Here in Canada, a man dismembers another and mails various parts across the country.

Such things ought never to happen.  Yet we must recognize that they did, because we cannot change circumstances that others have hoisted upon us.  These events are now part of our collective history.

What we can change is where we go from here – our reaction is just that.  Our choice(s) in light of circumstance.  You COULD just ignore these events.  If you choose to do that, perhaps George Santayana’s words will ring true (“Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it”).  Or, perhaps, you will reflect on where the trend is showing us to be heading, and you’ll do your level best to do SOMETHING about it.   As Edmund Burke said, “All that is required for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing.”




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