April 18, 2009
Another kind of blasphemy
Floundering around in a smoke-free daze, I realise that stopping smoking is a massive system intervention. For those of you who have never smoked and just imagine it to be a self indulgent addiction, the best analogy I can think of for what it is like to stop is is when you lose internet connectivity for some time or when your computer collapses. It is that sense of interruption to normal functioning. That "I'll check it on google, oh no I can't." That sense of the balance of your world being disturbed. That feeling of not quite knowing how to proceed now the prop of that technology is no longer there to augment your functioning.
There is also something quite appalling about this kind of being lost and the busy attempts to divert oneself from the feelings that accompany it and the the wishing away of time in a kind of mindless yearning, which is a kind of blasphemy.
I was reminded of this everyday kind of blasphemy, reading Bryan Appleyard's review of Lewis Wolpert's "How We Live and Why We Die: the Secret Lives of Cells" in the New Statesman today. This was the key paragraph:
Reading that passage reminded me of watching a video of a lecture by Woldpert describing our development from a single cell some weeks ago. Now I find something about Woldpert very unsympathetic, so it wasn't his charisma that awoke a profound sense of wonder and mystery in me. It was just the facts he presented that, in Appleyard's words, revealed the sense of, "Being alive and aware is, indeed, a miracle, whatever meaning you attach to that word."
I had a similar feeling reading Jonah Lehrer's account of the role of dopamine in some of our most important, but non-conscious learning in his book "The Decisive Moment".
These glimpses of wonder and mystery are something that should be central to our sense of well being, but too often get lost lost in the busy nothingness that can fill our days. This seems to be something I need to remind myself of, because it is something I too easily forget. Looking for another quote in a similar vein I found a piece I wrote a little over two years ago, "Mystery, Wonder and the Mystical", where I concluded:
The current economic and financial turmoil inevitably leads to a sense of anxiety as well as an opportunity to rethink. It's a bit like giving up smoking or losing internet connectivity - a system disruption. Disruptive states are probably not the best places to be to cultivate a sense of wonder and mystery. But if we are to stumble through our individual and collective concerns and anxieties I think we do to find a way of doing so. As I have written before :
And, as Chris Corrigan writes in a long and thoughtful piece:
So, let's make reverence our operating system, cultivate a sense of wonder and mystery, celebrate the everyday miracle of being alive and find the sources of our well-being through purposive drift.
Posted by richard at April 18, 2009 1:23 AM