We Live in Our Heads
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
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There is only
one physical world, but unfortunately, we all live in different
worlds created by our minds.
The physical
world, which is separate from us, can be contacted only through
our senses sight, hearing, smell, touch and taste
but all of these are limited. There are parts of the spectrum we
can't see, sounds we can't hear. We are lucky that our olfactory
nerves are limited, because I suspect that the world our dogs smell
is a pretty stinky place.
Furthermore,
the part of the Earth we actually occupy is for most of us quite
limited. We fill in the blanks with ideas and concepts and images
that may or may not conform to reality. Even though we can learn
from reading and hearing, the most vivid learning always comes from
experience. People who have had direct contact with racism or anti-Semitism
are not likely to be convinced by arguments. Reading about, say,
China is no substitute for actually being there.
Thus, the
world we inhabit is shaped by our experiences. I was born in the
Deep South. I would see the world differently if I had been born
in New England. I've often wished we could have many lives, because
I would like to experience what it's like to be a New Englander,
a Midwesterner, a Westerner, a farmer, a scientist and dozens of
other interesting lives. Unfortunately, in this cosmic card game
we are dealt only one hand.
But since
our means of learning are limited so that we can never learn everything
about anything, we should avoid being dogmatic. I don't mean living
in a constant state of uncertainty, but we should at least always
concede the possibility that what we think is so isn't so. I have
trouble understanding people who get emotionally upset when they
bump into an opinion they disagree with. I've always found that
conversation with people with whom I disagree is more interesting
than a conversation with people who agree with me.
Perfectionism
is another pitfall that should be avoided. Perfectionists are apt
to be chronically frustrated, since neither the world nor the people
in it are perfect. It's better to expect too little and be pleasantly
surprised on occasion than to expect too much and always be disappointed.
One of the
more difficult things to avoid is bitterness. In a normal life there
will be disappointments, in ourselves if in nothing else. Things
don't always turn out the way we want them. People don't always
live up to our expectations. People we want to win sometimes lose
and vice versa. The thing to remember is that from the day of our
birth to the day of our death, we live only in the present. The
past is only a memory. The future never exists. So the old saying
that any day above ground is a good start is not a bad philosophy
to follow. It's a very good idea to let go of the past and to live
in the present moment. That's not easy to do, but it is a worthy
goal.
There
is a lot of emphasis today on cleaning up the physical environment,
but the environment that should receive the top priority is our
mental environment. People can quite literally think themselves
into madness. Some good advice came from St. Paul when he wrote,
"Whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest,
whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever
things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there
be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things."
That's because another biblical saying is quite true: "As a
man thinketh, so is he."
Speaking of
thinking, there is no good in wallowing in evil, which, by the way,
Hollywood seems to desire for us to do. I'm rather tired of stories
about crooks stealing from crooks and of psychopaths killing other
psychopaths.
May
12, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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