I’ve had the opportunity to give a bit more thought to my experience at Starwood. I’ve been trying to summarize things, and I can’t do better than I already have. “Awe. Dread. Sorrow.” That was my primary experience of Starwood. But there is much more I can say about that Awe, Dread, and Sorrow.
Lesson the first: Hedonism is the only sin I’ve ever been able to categorize. This is difficult for me to say for two reasons. One, I don’t really believe in sin, and two, I consider myself rather hedonistic at times. I was wrong. I saw real hedonism at Starwood.
Hedonism, to paraphrase Wikipedia, is the philosophy that pleasure is the ultimate good. In essence, everything is done, or should be done, in the pursuit of pleasure. I can’t express strongly enough how wrong this philosophy is. Pleasure is indeed a good thing, but the blind pursuit of pleasure is as wrong and dangerous as the blind pursuit of anything else. Our existence is predicated on a spectrum of experience and relationships. When our pursuit of pleasure is more important than those relationships it becomes self-destructive.
Hedonism, at it’s worst, seems to me an addiction. It drives a person ever towards their next fix. It teaches us to avoid any discomfort or pain and to seek out pleasure wherever it may be found. When our ethics are determined by our addiction we are completely unable to live or operate in a sustainable relationship with the world around us. We see this demonstrated by drug addiction on a regular basis in our society. I am beginning to believe that our cultural predisposition towards the misuse of drugs and alchohol is actually a symptom of the hedonistic philosophy underlying our consumer economy.
The Starwood bonfire, which took all week to build, was a prime instance of hedonistic excess. The entire community was focused on this act, on this revelry, but the event was devoid of any meaning or purpose beyond induldgence. There were no words spoken, no forces evoked, no reason given. The bonfire was reason enough. The sheer pleasure of the act was purpose enough.
I have a great deal to say about my time at Starwood. I promise, but I’m still processing much of that. And since it has been some time since I’ve posted anything, and since I have words today, here is what I have.
I feel small. Terribly terribly small. Like I’ve taken on burdens far beyond what I can reasonably sustain. I feel as though the city is crushing me. Like I haven’t had time for myself, for my own healing, my owh thoughts, my own processes. I feel little and crowded. The introvert in me is positively screaming and begging to escape.
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Making the best of a bad situation is sometimes more than you can hope for, but it’s always something to aim at.
I don’t believe, philisophically, that people choose to behave badly. In fact, I don’t believe people make the choice of being evil. Evil is the product of different values, bad judgment, an inability to reason, or an inability to temper reason with values, or any one of a hundred other mixtures of state. I believe that people are inherently good. They do what they think is right. It may not be in line with their stated or cultural morals, but they think it is the best decision they can make at the time.
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Last week I noticed an odd number of hits on a post I made about a year ago. 2009 06 30: Channeled messages The post is a group of channeled messages, some of them general some of them pretty specific and targeted towards me. One of these messages I had completely forgotten about, but is eerily relevant to my processes lately.
School yourself to patience as you have before. And school yourself to denial. The path of the ascetic has lessons which you have not learned. Avoid not desire, but recognize the pursuit of desire differs from the pursuit of the wrong. Desire is good, a strong pull and a stronger knowledge. But choose to pursue the desire that drives you, not the desire that is driven.
We will hold you in our hearts as you hold us. Know that no force can withstand your pursuit of desire if you understand the power of denial.
It’s the first day of June. Summer has officially begun. Well, it’s the first night of June. 1:38 am. I can’t sleep. The moon is waning, but her light is still bright in the sky. Bright enough to keep my overactive thoughts a churning long past when I should have been asleep. I’m pondering things that I can’t share with the public, so why I’m writing I’m not even sure. I guess I hope that by writing something I’ll be able to put my mind at rest so I can eventually get to sleep.
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