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Desireës territory is the map of our vulnerabilities
Tuesday, 30 January 2007 14:18
Marc Mullinax
"Reduce your wants and supply your needs. Our needs make us vulnerable enough. Why increase our vulnerability?"
ÇƒÏ M. K. Gandhi
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MARS HILL ÇƒÓ Just before the recent economic season some mislabel as "Christmas," this column spoke to the inner machinery of human avarice. Unchecked desires stalk us, weakening our moral immune system and enabling all kinds of embarrassing acts, such as unchecked acquisition.

My thesis for this essay is that we are the products of our desires, and often this means the unwitting slaves of our unexamined desires. Using colorful street language with my students, I say, "Weëre all prostitutes ÇƒÓ every last one of us; some of us command higher prices, and some of us walk the streets."


Desires are good only when understood how they work on us, how they get submerged into our inner souls, and then merge with thoughts and emerge as behavior. Unexamined desires are always bad. "The unexamined life is not worth living," according to Socrates.

Letës say that a particular desire influences you. It could be anything, but the Big Three are power, money and sex. However, in this case, you are blissfully unaware of this desire. For example, one could be unconsciously desirous of acceptance. Needy acceptance. And so, one goes through life tripping up in relationships because oneës unexamined neediness takes up all the oxygen. Nothing healthy can thrive. All the resources go to feeding oneës unexamined neurosis. And one wonders why one is so alone.


Buddhism is the worldës foremost faith for directly confronting desire. Its first teaching is that our No. 1 problem is unchastened desires. Until we solve this we will be enslaved to our own self-ignorance, and such ignorance is always ÇƒÓ at some level ÇƒÓ freely chosen. Oh, we can rationalize it a hundred ways, but thereës always a moment when we caved, and "settled" for enslavement over freedom.


I mention Buddhism because it is perhaps our worldës most sophisticated way this world has developed to uncover desire. Becoming desireless is so important that the faith cites oneës destiny is staked upon it. Its program for becoming desireless is relentless self-examination to see how desire taints even what we think is our best. Even the desire to be a self-actualized individual can be rendered suspect because of the motives involved.


Hereës whatës at stake for us all. Proceeding through life without adequate self examination of desire renders us ÇƒÓ as individuals, as societies, and even as nations ÇƒÓ vulnerable. The places of our unrebuked desire map out our vulnerabilities, opening us up to exploitation. Repeat that sentence until it makes sense; it cannot be emphasized enough.


Our president says we have an "addiction to oil." Unresolved desires are our addictions; thereës no difference. And so we go pell-mell into our world, in denial, wreaking havoc in far-flung places we understand even less than our desires, and we lose wars because we know not why we go to war. We are rendered not just vulnerable but impoverished by our desires. Plato warned: Poverty is not the absence of goods, but rather the overabundance of desire.


The person or nation driven by undisputed desires is a puppet, a non-living human-like figure. The puppet knows not what wires or strings have been inserted into its body, and so it hasnët an inkling of who controls the business ends of those tethers. Ignorant puppets we are, denying what makes us behave as we do.


The addicted are sad because of their enslavement to desire. My desires are perhaps obvious to all (save myself) and are never at the top of anyoneës (even Godës) agenda save mine. Understood desires, however, are no longer controlling addictions, but rather, tools. Desires reveal who we are, and that often must be very sad news before it becomes good.


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Dr. Marc S. Mullinax, chairman of the philosophy and religion departments at Mars Hill College, can be reached at mmullinax-at-mhc.edu.

 



 


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