Cate Montana and me in a much more hopeful time. Click on image to view it full size. (Cate's selfie c. 2014)
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WHAT WE ARE witnessing in this year's presidential campaign is the transformation of the politics of trauma
into a politics of rage. It is unlike anything I have ever witnessed,
neither during my 55-year journalism career nor as a citizen, but it is
obviously (and eerily) a nationwide macrocosm of what Elisabeth Kübler-Ross described as the five stages of terminal illness: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and acceptance.
The trauma is capitalism's double murder
of the so-called American Dream and the U.S. experiment in
representative democracy. It is the shock of the accompanying
assassinations, the terror generated by the inescapable joblessness of
the 99 Percent and the associated foreclosures, evictions and
homelessness. It is further evidenced by the resultant unprecedented
increase in poverty and particularly in premature death rates, including
among previously favored proletarian white males and white women as well.
Thus
we are once again shown what Karl Marx first dared reveal in 1848: that
capitalism is an always-fatal disease for which there is no cure save
revolution.
But
– witness events in Russia c. 1917-1941 – we also know the cure can
prove to be as deadly as the disease, which adds to our fearsome
hopelessness.
Hence, as we shall see, the relevance of the Kübler-Ross hypothesis,
which remember is not – say again NOT – necessarily a linear
progression. Indeed – based on my own observations, which include the
deaths of friends and colleagues, the death of liberty in the United
States, the looming death of our species and my own experience with the
encroachment of death that is aging – I would reverse Kübler-Ross'
final two stages. First comes acceptance: the complete acknowledgment,
emotional as well as intellectual, of what is occurring. Then – unless
one is deluded by the fantasies provided by religion or spirituality –
comes depression, the unavoidable consequence of recognizing the utter
futility of human life, the ultimate metaphor for which is the
graveyard.
Here then is my initial impression of how the Kübler-Ross model defines our present political circumstances:
Denial:
as in the overwhelmingly closed-minded refusal of most voters,
especially the Republicans and the Clintonoid Democrats, to recognize
the deadliness of capitalism. Therefore they cannot understand their
choices of candidates – metaphorically the same as choices of medicines
and treatment modalities – are at the very least as worthless as snake
oil and in all probability will radically hasten the onset of death.
Anger: the politics of rage and the present state of reaction on the Donald Trump Right and the Bernie Sanders Left.
Bargaining:
typified by those throughout the political spectrum who, ignorant of
history, foolishly believe negotiation by disempowered masses can
ameliorate the savagery of capitalism.
Acceptance:
the infinitely bitter realization we have been reduced to serfdom
and/or slavery, that the “America” we knew will never be resurrected and
that resistance is therefore futile. The result is begrudging surrender
to capitalism (that is, to a society based on the moral imbecility of
infinite greed and selfishness, with these qualities officially
redefined as maxim heights of virtue); and equally begrudging submission
to capitalist governance (that is, to a political apparatus based on
absolute power and unlimited profit for the One Percent and their Ruling
Class vassals, total subjugation and bottomless poverty for all the
rest of us).
Depression:
the realization of our total powerlessness, characterized in the
political realm by recognition of how our powerlessness reduces politics
to meaninglessness. This was undoubtedly the realization that – after
the 2013 Republican coup in Olympia gave the GOP total control of Washington state government
and schooled the electorate in the irrelevance of elections – prompted
72 percent of the state's registered voters to refuse to vote in 2014.
The result, a turnout of only 28 percent,
is reportedly the lowest ever recorded in the United States. Not
coincidentally, it reflects exactly the sort of alienation that is
symptomatic of clinical depression, which in turn is increasingly
recognized as a definitive byproduct of capitalism.
*** *** ***
UNLESS
WE ARE obscenely rich or already lost in the wastelands of dementia,
the painful realities of old age will sooner or later reveal the “golden years” meme as merely another of the Big Lies routinely disseminated by capitalism in its predatory hunt for profits.
Originally
intended to loot the pensions of petite-bourgeois retirees by conning
them into buying overpriced real estate, the “golden years” Big Lie
caught on because it cleverly sidesteps the awful truth of old age –
that unless we are spared its horrors by the blessing of sudden death,
it is a long and terrible imprisonment in ever-increasing misery and
wretchedness, with our own bodies reduced to torture-chambers from which
there is no hope of rescue.
There
is no bargaining with old age. Its essence is ever-more-intensified
awareness of approaching death. And death, which completes the aging
process of reducing our bodies to reeking garbage, is likewise the
obliteration of individual consciousness. Since there is nothing outside
of or beyond individual consciousness, death is for each of us the
apocalypse in microcosm. It is literally the end, forever, of everything
including all potential.
And
here in the United States – where we low-income elderly people are now
forced to survive under constant threat of maliciously lethal cuts in
life-sustaining stipends and services – its inherent awfulness is
methodically worsened by the intentionally cruel policies of what
statistics prove has become the most deliberately vicious nation in the
industrial world.
*** *** ***
BEFORE I CONTINUE, I should apologize for (again) dropping out of sight.
I was working toward posting to OAN
weekly, as I have done for most of its six-and-one-half year history,
as indeed I did until last year, when my working life became
depressingly complicated due to the failure of my computer and an
infuriating succession of Microshaft-inflicted disasters with its
replacement.
Hence my OAN
posting-frequency dropped off to less than once per month, and I lost
probably 95 percent of my readers. Finally, recognizing the magnitude of
the loss, I resolved to return to once-weekly posting or at least as
close a proximity to that frequency as I could achieve.
Now
though old age has intervened, this time in the form of a
life-threatening geriatric ailment called cellulitis, an infection that
necessitated inter-venous antibiotics and an ongoing course of oral
antibiotics which – knock on wood – seem to be (slowly) beating the
run-amok bacteria into reluctant submission.
But that affliction, which includes the possibility of a complication called necrotizing fasciitis
– bacteriological storm troopers ravaging one's flesh, invariably
causing loss of limbs and often the (merciful) loss of life – has
combined with another I am not yet able to write about, and the two have
stripped me of any and all illusions about the future, including
whatever long-range potential I might have (foolishly) imagined was yet
residual in my photography and writing.
Of
course I will continue writing and photographing – for me those
activities are as natural as breathing and perhaps equally vital as well
– but from here on I do so with full and bitter recognition that since
the 1983 fire destroyed my true life's work, I have never been more than
another faint specter of that art-scene archetypal for whom William
Butler Yeats wrote the short poem “To a Friend Whose Work Has Come to
Nothing.”
*** *** ***
THIS IS MY second battle with cellulitis. The first, in my left leg, was in the fall of 2014. Now it is in my right leg.
My
susceptibility to it is intensified both by old age and the bad
circulation in my extremities that is the legacy of a childhood fall
through the ice – fortunately into water that was only waist deep –
during subzero Michigan weather. This time the cellulitis began a couple
of days after my 76th birthday – not really a surprise as I am always
stricken by some life-disrupting disaster on or near my birthdays – as
if fate must always remind me that in the eyes of whatever gods might or
more likely do not exist, I will never be more than the despised child I
became after my mother 's 1945 attempt at post-partum abortion.
(My
personal calendar includes two other days I long ago recognized as
guarantors of misfortune. One is Christmas, on or close to which no less
than three computers have died and which is often the occasion of some
grave sickness – happy holidays from Jesus. I am similarly bashed by
fate on or near the autumnal equinox: that's when I came down with the
2014 cellulitis infection, and in 1978, on that exact date (23
September), was when a defiantly habitual drunken driver's vehicular
assault destroyed my new Honda Civic and damned me to a lifetime of
relentlessly worsening back pain.)
The
medical people tell me another contributory factor in the cellulitis
problem is the now-obviously permanent obesity that has plagued me since
I quit smoking 20 years ago. Though I was a slender child until I
entered puberty, from about my 10th year on, my hateful mother used her
summertime custody of me to force-feed me into grotesque obesity. It
was, from her perspective, a trifecta: an expression of her hatred of
me, an expression of her hatred of heterosexual males and, best of all,
an expression of her hatred of my father – a way to avenge herself on
both me and him by giving him – a former prep-school athlete who
regarded obesity as an ultimate form of loathsomeness – yet another item
to add to the already long list of reasons he despised me nearly as
much as my mother and most of her relatives did.
But
by age 15 I had smoked my way back to some semblance of physical
attractiveness – at least enough to lose my virginity early that year
thanks to a very lovely young lady – and though I was never truly
handsome, I remained adequately attractive until the successful battle
with nicotine addiction (ironically) upped my weight by 100 pounds. I
smoked my last cigarette 20 years ago, and after innumerable diets it is
now obvious there is no way I will ever lose the excess fat. Hence I am
once again the ugly blob I was from age 10 to age 14. Obviously there
are some forms of childhood accursedness that always triumph in the end.
Moreover
the life-disruptions inflicted by this most recent episode of
cellulitis have shown me beyond any doubt I am no longer able to meet
even self-imposed deadlines, which in turn tells me there is no point
trying to rebuild OAN's readership or – for that matter – attempting any work (photography or writing) more demanding than the monthly newsletter I produce for my 50 neighbors. (And this month, thanks to my illnesses, even that is late.)
Yes, as I said above, I will continue posting here, but never again with any attempt to maintain a predetermined schedule.
Meanwhile
the cellulitis is obviously prophetic. It is a preview of what awaits
me in whatever years or months I have left. Old age, I now understand,
is a terminal illness. I will have better days. worse days and,
undoubtedly as the end nears, truly awful days, but I know now I will
never again be well.
And
what will become of me if I am still alive when next the One Percenters
and their wholly owned Democratic and Republican vassals further slash
my access to medical care?
*** *** ***
OLD
AGE IS also – unless one is genuinely craven – a time of confronting
the ugliest truths about one's self. When one finally acknowledges that
one is definitively unlovable – that one has never known, nor ever will
know, the exquisite blessing bestowed by a truly loving woman's
infinitely affectionate glance – all other tragedies, death included,
are diminished to psychological manageability.
Subconsciously
I have have known this truth since childhood: my mother never once said
she loved me, and following the events of 1945, all but one of her
relatives made their own animosities evident. From their perspective I
was the embarrassing reminder of a terrible secret – my mother's arrest
and subsequent (merciful) confinement for two years in an insane asylum
because my father (mercifully) refused to press charges against her for
the attempted murder of me, their son, and himself as well. From then
on, my mere existence thus threatened disclosures that – given the vast
universe of predatory malice that underlies capitalism – would have
jeopardize my maternal grandparents' financial security, which was based
mostly on my grandfather's ability to peddle life insurance to
corporate clientele.
Though
no woman ever truly loved me, I did acquire, during my sexually active
years, a reputation for patient, sensitive, perceptive delivery of
orgasmic goods and thus – because women speak comfortably with one
another of such matters in clinical detail we men can scarcely imagine –
I was blessed with bed-partners aplenty. I also, from childhood onward,
had many female friends, not the least because I regard their gender,
with all its innumerable subtleties of interacting logic and emotion, to
be far more interesting than the my own gender's (pathetically) linear
thinking, which is typically as emotionless as poured concrete and as
directionally predictable – boring, even – as any Interstate highway.
But
the fire and its aftermath stripped me of all the occupational panoply
of attractiveness. Since then – save for two distant interludes with
women I had hitherto known for many years but will never see again – my
bed has been naught but chilly emptiness.
Conversely,
the women who were my friends – those who sought nothing more from me
than intellectual companionship and/or emotional support – have remained
utterly faithful to our friendship, sometimes in unexpected ways so
moving it has brought me to tears.
But now nearly all of these women – Left radicals or pagan activists – are dead. Each of them was felled by cancer in the primes of their lives
– an apparent coincidence so unnerving that more than once it has
prompted me to wonder if the Presidential Death Warrants announced by
Barack the Betrayer do not have a much longer clandestine history.
The
bright spot in all this malaise – the good news (at least for me) – is
the awfulness of my childhood and the radically diminished but
nevertheless omnipresent elements of wretchedness that always haunted
the edges of my adult my life and that now in old age have become its
epicenter have nevertheless given me an ability to unflinchingly
recognize the dimensions of our present-day impasse: to think the
officially unthinkable and to verbalize, often defiantly, the officially
unspeakable: that the positive qualities that defined what we once
thought of as “our nation” are slain and never to be resurrected, and
that as a result our entire species is most likely doomed.
Seeing
so clearly and unflinchingly was an exceptionally useful talent when I
was a member of the working press. But I was never allowed to apply it
to its maximum potential. This was true even in the alternative press,
which – ironically – pioneered what is now damned as “infotainment”: a
perversion spawned by its editors' relentless insistence on text that is
as entertaining (i.e., “fun to read”) as it is informative.
Though
it is something of an aside, I should note here I was never a “fun”
writer, not even when, as a three-pack-per-day smoker, I was effectively
self-medicated against dyslexia and thus at the height of my
reportorial ability. The frown so often inherent in my prose – and even
it its best, the corners of its mouth have always tended downward – was
never a problem as long as I was in the Northeast, where news was
expected to be solemnly informative, and where my reports on a New
Jersey school crisis, for example, were sufficiently authoritative to be
submitted as evidence in a Supreme Court case. But on the West Coast,
being able to turn even a matter of grave importance into a “fun read”
was a prerequisite for major-newspaper success. Hence – though I see
this only now in the harsh clarity of geriatric retrospect – the real
death of my journalism career, the point at which it became fatally
becalmed in a Sargasso Sea of mediocre publications, was in 1970, when a
decidedly improbable series of tragicomic disasters stranded me in
Washington state with no means to return to New York City.
Because
I have been a male Cassandra most of my adult life – my identification
of the old Counterculture as the first wave of the resurrection of
antiquity's Great Goddess and thus also the opening battle of a
revolution against patriarchy was initially as much jeered as it has
since been emphatically proven true by the events themselves – I am not
surprised to be equally scorned in old age. It is merely another of the
predictable but nevertheless frustrating ironies of an unalterably
disadvantaged life that, even now when my skills as a visionary,
iconoclastic analyst might at last prove useful in our pathetically
tardy campaign to save ourselves from extinction, I am confronted by
both the microcosm and macrocosm of death. The microcosm is the
personal, the unmistakably terminal condition of old age and all its
characteristic ailments and limitations. The macrocosm is the political,
our species' headlong rush toward apocalypse, for which the interplay
of shibboleths and taboos in the 2016 presidential election campaign
compose an almost perfect metaphor. Whether personally or politically, I
am thus already in the fast lane on the Death Expressway, and whatever I
might say or do will make not a scintilla of lasting difference, either
in my own circumstances or those of anyone else.
Yet
as much as I am saddened by my looming personal apocalypse, I am much
relieved by the near certainty I will not live long enough to witness
the infinitely larger apocalypse I am now absolutely sure will befall
our species and our Mother Earth just as it has already befallen the
liberty for which our homeland was formerly a global symbol.
*** *** ***
AS
I MYSELF was inescapably cursed by familial hatefulness, so are we all
inescapably cursed by the metastasized hatefulness that defines
capitalism and Abrahamic religion – the most venomously murderous pair
of afflictions ever evolved on this woefully unhappy planet.
But
these ideologies of malice are the very pillars of Hillary Clinton's
consciousness. Which is why – as I have said so many times in
comment-thread posts on Reader Supported News – I will not vote
for Hillary under any circumstances. Though my preference is of course
Bernie Sanders, it is literally better we have Donald Trump than Hillary
Clinton. Trump not only brandishes the morally imbecilic avarice
Hillary so desperately tries to hide (which makes him easier to predict
and therefore to control), but, like Sanders, he swears he will protect
Social Security and Medicare. Hillary meanwhile is sworn to do the
opposite: to “reform” it – that is, to destroy it (thus boosting the
profits of the Wall Street whoremasters) – presumably with the same
genocidal savagery her husband “reformed” welfare.
In
the meantime we seniors and disabled people are once again threatened
with the (further) termination of our life-sustaining subsidies and
services. Once again we are (deliberately) assaulted by (intentionally)
death-dealing anxieties earlier generations of modern USians could never
have imagined. Such is capitalism, and such too is apparently the
Hillary Clinton brand of Christianity.
Hence my remarks on a Thom Hartmann comment thread last week, shortened, revised (and therefore not italicized) for publication here:
Were
there still in the United States any mainstream journalists worthy of
the name, Hillary's infinite corruption – including the fact her true
politics are those of the closeted, reflexively fascistic Goldwater Girl
she has remained ever since opportunism prompted her to don Democratic
disguise – would be common knowledge. Indeed it is at least possible
she, her husband and Barack (the Betrayer) Obama are each not only the
agents of Wall Street we know them to be, but willing operatives within a
far greater and more malevolent One Percent conspiracy to actually
destroy the Democratic Party and thereby forever remove from U.S.
politics even the most remote possibility of overthrowing the plutocracy
and restoring the New Deal.
If
indeed Hillary's hate-Sanders campaign succeeds in winning her the
Democratic nomination, it will also succeed in destroying the party
beyond any hope of repair. The consequences will ensure a Republican
presidential victory, the result of which will be either the beginning
of de jure Christian theocracy under Cruz and his Dominionists
or the advent of overt USian Nazism under Trump and his latter-day
stormtroopers.
Given Hillary's Goldwater Girl politics, it is at least arguable this is her clandestine purpose. For confirmation of which see The Family: the Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power
(Jeff Sharlet, Harper: 2008), pages 272-277, particularly the
infinitely damning disclosure on page 275: “Hillary fights side-by-side
with (Sam) Brownback and others for legislation dedicated less to
overturning the wall between church and state than to tunneling beneath
it” – precisely as any deep-cover Goldwater Girl/Christofascist agent
would do.
It was thus no surprise to me one of Hillary's supporters would seize the RSN
comment thread generated by Naomi Kline's “The Problem With Hillary
Clinton Isn't Just Her Corporate Cash. It's Her Corporate Worldview” as
an opportunity to denounce Sanders as a “Godless socialist.” I responded
accordingly (my reference to The Family retained because I truly believe Sharlet's disclosures cannot be cited too often):
Frankly,
if the United States is so toxic with Christian fanaticism it still
despises spiritual nonconformists or nonbelievers and thus would deny us
our Constitutional rights, then like all the other hateful Abrahamic
theocracies, it deserves whatever apocalypse befalls it.
In
which context note too Hillary's woefully under-publicized
collaboration with the Christian Dominionists – most notably Sam
Brownback and his ilk – to impose de jure theocracy: see The Family: the Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power (Jeff Sharlet, Harper: 2008), particularly pages 272-277.
Thus
Hillary willingly collaborates with fanatics who believe the
destruction of our planet and the extinction of our species is the
“holy” fulfillment of the Abrahamic god's “divine plan.” This in turn
suggests she holds such fanatical views herself. Which thereby explains
both her otherwise inexplicable support for environmental destruction
and her wanton provocations of nuclear war.
In
other words, Hillary the 1964 Goldwater Girl is still a Goldwater Girl
in 2016. Which means that in her heart, she is no different from her
Republican rivals – and may in fact be running precisely to facilitate a
Republican victory and the apocalypse that would inevitably follow.
Think, people. Or as a fellow Occupier so memorably said, “Occupy Your Mind.”
With
Sanders' alleged atheism further inflaming the Christians – the
evidence of this presidential campaign is beginning to convince me the
term “Christian fanatic” is a redundancy – another pro-Sanders poster
suggested the Christians' real grievance is their adamant opposition to
the constitutional separation of church and state. Hence I added an
afterthought:
History
proves unequivocally that most people who are genuine believers in the
Abrahamic religions – Judaism, Christianity, Islam – do indeed despise
the Constitution. That's because the scriptures attributed to the
Abrahamic god repeatedly command the persecution and death of all
non-believers.
(The link to RSN's republication of Klein's piece is here. Unfortunately the link now goes directly to The Nation, the original publisher of “Corporate Worldview, ” which means the RSN comment thread has been obliterated – flushed down the Orwell hole for no reason I can discern.)
As I said on another RSN comment thread,
this in response to remarks on “Carter Dismisses Clinton's State
Department Work,” my original text substantially revised (thus not
italicized) for publication here:
I
am increasingly convinced Hillary is an undercover operative either for
the Christian Fundamentalists themselves or for some organization that
recognizes how fundamentalist theology sanctions the malevolence of
capitalism and enables its subjugation of the 99 Percent. Note
particularly her clandestine collaboration with other Christofascist
types documented by Jeff Sharlet as noted above.
Thus
the birds-of-a-feather-flock-together evidence indicates she believes,
as they do, in Armageddon, the End Times, the Rapture and all the other
implicitly suicidal elements in Abrahamic dogma. This in turn suggests
her warmongering is deliberate rather than a product of incompetence and
is in fact intended to bring on the end of the human species and the
destruction of Mother Earth precisely as described in the chapter of the
Bible entitled “Revelation.”
Obviously,
the real source of USian “exceptionalism” – the most modern variant of
Nazism yet – is the exceptionalism always claimed by the creeds of
Judaism, Christianity and Islam: the “one true religion,” complete with
the divinely awarded right to exterminate anyone who disagrees.
In
the days since I wrote that paragraph in its initial comment-thread
form, it has occurred to me it is entirely possible Hillary the
Goldwater Girl was recruited during her undergraduate years at Wellesley
College to become the deep-cover, anything-for-the-One-Percent agent
she obviously is now. She apparently went operational with her obviously
loveless, obviously opportunistic marriage to Bill Clinton. Hers is
thus probably the hands-on-the-joystick influence responsible for her
husband's shape-shift from New Deal Democrat to Closet Republican.
By
whom was she recruited? Most likely the same Gestapo types who
engineered the murders of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Malcolm X,
Martin Luther King Jr., Sen. Robert Francis Kennedy, Fred Hampton, Karen
Silkwood, etc. ad nauseam. In which context Oliver Stone's comment, “Clinton has been for every war we fought,” is especially relevant.
*** *** ***
ALSO
RELEVANT TO this download of dismal discourse is the debate that so
often dominates conversations between my dear friend Cate Montana and
me. It is our own variant of the critical but mostly unpublicized
disagreement that severed the Counterculture of Rebellion into two rival
camps during the 1960s and has raged beneath the hurly-burly of USian
society ever since.
One
side argues, as do I, that we cannot save ourselves from extinction
unless we recognize capitalism as the societal equivalent of terminal
cancer and remove it with the same relentless thoroughness with which
its biological counterpart is removed from the bodies of those obscenely
privileged plutocrats who are wealthy enough afford the otherwise
prohibitive costs of genuinely curative surgery.
In the vernacular of many 1960s communities, those who believed as I do were known as “politicals.”
The
other side argues, as does Ms. Montana, that we cannot bring about the
political and socioeconomic revolution that is now obviously our only
alternative to extinction unless we each first experience a revolution –
she would say “evolution” – in our own individual minds.
In
'60s vernacular, Ms.Montana would have been labeled a “human
potentialist.” Today she is part of what is called the New Age Movement.
Actually
– and I cannot recall ever having witnessed more vivid proof of what I
am about to say than is provided by the national dysfunction manifest in
the 2016 presidential election campaign – both our positions are
correct. The ignorantly reactionary rage of the Right not withstanding,
it is increasingly obvious our only alternative to extinction (whether
by thermonuclear war, environmental apocalypse or both) is socialism.
But
the socioeconomic and political revolution essential to build socialism
will not be possible until individual consciousness evolves beyond the
Ayn Rand egotism that has become the USian norm. We either learn to live
in a cooperative society based on the core socialist principle – from
each according to ability; to each according to need – or we are doomed,
already as a nation and almost certainly as a species. On this much,
Ms. Montana and I emphatically agree.
Where
we differ – differ radically in fact – is in the means to the end. Ms.
Montana argues there can be no revolution – at least no successful
revolution – without the prerequisite of personal transformation. I
argue such a revolution in consciousness will not be possible until we
first strip the capitalists of their now virtually divine omnipotence.
Witness
the fate of Occupy: as of now, the One Percenters and their Ruling
Class vassals have the truly godlike ability to detect and suppress any
progressive movement – including one as definitively non-violent as the
personal transformation advocated by Ms. Montana – literally before its
birth. And given our absolute and eternal defenselessness in the face of
the One Percent's equally godlike powers of electronic surveillance and
drone-inflicted murder, even the most emphatically peaceful revolution
may have already been rendered eternally impossible. Many of us, myself
included, now believe the only possible way a revolution could succeed
is with Mother Earth's apocalyptic intervention.
At
this juncture, in fairness to Ms. Montana, I believe it better she
speak for herself. Here then is an explanatory quote from page 129 of
her forthcoming book The E Word (Enliven Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster), which is slated for publication next year:
Over
99 percent of all scientists warn about the devastating impact of
fossil fuels and climate change and the cataclysm the world is rapidly
headed towards. But the egos in charge—the captains of government and
industry crazed by their lust for personal power and control at all
costs—don’t care.
And
if the rest of us don’t catch on, shift gears and boot the crazies out
of the driver’s seat—including the crazy running our own lives—we
already know the outcome.
Since
1950 no fewer than 263 movies depicting apocalyptic wasteland realities
have hit the silver screen: On the Beach, The Day the Earth Stood
Still, Mad Max, Soylent Green...
In Ms. Montana's formulation, “the crazy running our own lives” is ego, which she describes, on page 91, as a
highly fearful and insecure program obsessed with image issues...This
EGO MIND is in control. not us. And the distressing, frightening,
dog-eat-dog world we live in is the result. (Caps as in original.)
In
other words, before we can topple our external oppressors, each of us
must first liberate ourselves, overthrowing that which oppresses us
internally, replacing it by shifting to a level of higher consciousness
she asserts is already within us and awaiting activation. She has
written The E Word – which borrows from her decades of personal
experience with the world's transformative disciplines (Zen Buddhism,
Taosim and the like) – to explain to us in everyday, non-esoteric yet
often lyrical English, how such liberation might be realized.
Beneath the meditations described in The E Word
is the unspoken and profoundly compelling assumption the human mind,
when properly focused, can transcend even the most formidable modes of
oppression. It is an ancient idea, probably most evident in the
practices and traditions that enabled countless generations of Asian
peoples to ride the disciplines of Zen and Taoism into a state of mind
that rendered the indigenous horrors of caste and tyranny irrelevant.
But these disciplines also suppressed – totally suppressed – the
yearning for political and economic liberty that has been a driving
force in Occidental society since the original, proto-communistic tribal
democracies were exterminated by the advent of patriarchy and the
emergence of imperialism.
Now
however – because capitalism has grown so monstrously tyrannical its
only counterparts are to be found in the histories of the ancient
despotisms to which Taoism and Zen were reactions – such remedies as Ms.
Montana urges may be our only alternative, a point made by Chris Hedges in a 2013 essay entitled “A Time for Sublime Madness”:
It
is only those who can retreat into the imagination, and through their
imagination can minister to the suffering of those around them, who
uncover the physical and psychological strength to resist.
I cited Hedges in “Unbearable Truths: Reflections on the Imbecility of Hope,” an OAN piece that is relevant here because its opening graf posed a variant of the same question The E Word seeks to answer:
How
does one who came of age when the United States was still a
quasi-democratic, socioeconomically mobile society, cope with the new
USian realities of irremediable powerlessness and inescapable
socioeconomic hopelessness?
Ms. Montana answers, as if in reply, “There
really is an understanding of self and life and the human condition so
profound and complete it washes away all confusion and thus all fears,
conflict, doubt and seeking forever...We just need to know what's what,
so we can make it happen” (page 171).
The wellspring premise in Ms. Montana's work – the metaphysical precept from which The E Word
flows – is that of an infinite, universal source-consciousness. It is,
as she describes it, a borderless realm that is as absolutely real as
the gods are absolutely metaphorical. It unites all being in the sort of
force-field the discoveries of quantum mechanics suggest is the first
cause of existence and therefore the origin of all being.
Perhaps
its best summation ever – whether in classical literature or modern
scientific treatise – is its metaphorical description by Lao Tzu 2600
years ago:
(1)
The DAO that can be expressed
is not the eternal DAO.
The name that can be named
is not the eternal name...
is not the eternal DAO.
The name that can be named
is not the eternal name...
(34)
The great DAO is overflowing:
It can be to the left and the right.
All things owe their existence to it,
and it does not refuse itself to them...
It can be to the left and the right.
All things owe their existence to it,
and it does not refuse itself to them...
(35)
...You look for it and you see nothing special.
You listen for it and you hear nothing special.
You act according to it and you find no end.
You listen for it and you hear nothing special.
You act according to it and you find no end.
(From Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching, The Book of Meaning and Life,
translation and commentary by Richard Wilhelm, translated
into English by H.G. Ostwald; Arkana: 1985)
translation and commentary by Richard Wilhelm, translated
into English by H.G. Ostwald; Arkana: 1985)
Point being, I urge you all to read Ms. Montana's book when it becomes available next year.
*** *** ***
MY POSITION ON all this remains much as I stated it in “Unbearable Truths”:
Though
a part of me believes, fervently and on the basis of seemingly
otherwise-inexplicable evidence, in the existence of (some) deity and an
afterlife including reincarnation, another part of me can with equal
conviction refute all such evidence as hallucinatory symptoms of
terminal insanity – the final response of the human mind to the
terrifying reality of death: the fact that for the one who is dying,
death is literally the end of everything, including the cosmos itself.
Trouble
is, after the confrontation with mortality forced on me by this ongoing
struggle – with cellulitis (which because of an apparent abscess may
yet send me to the hospital and could even cost me my leg, a loss that,
given my age and how I am crippled by spinal arthritis, would
unquestionably be fatal), also with this other affliction I cannot yet
name aloud – even the most logically presented, eloquently phrased
notions of any reality beyond the world of our five senses is reduced to
absurdity. Connection with DAO will not stop a bullet. Nor will psychic
immersion in the ego-less state advocated by Ms. Montana – please,
Cate, no offense intended – halt assault by terminal infection.
Like
most New Agers, Ms. Montana often emphasizes our species' kinship with
all other earthly life. But once we acknowledge that kinship – once we
see ourselves mirrored in all else which is born and lives and thus
inevitably dies (particularly if we have hunted and fished and grown
food and watched other creatures expire) – we cannot but recognize the
absolute permanence of death. The grouse knocked dead from the sky by a
shotgun and fetched by a spaniel never resurrects itself in a game bag
or anywhere else; the trout in a creel never awakens to new life; the
spent corn-stalks cut down and stacked in shocks never re-green to
fecund vitality. Death is forever – and even if one is willing to yield
themselves up to utter madness – that fact is inescapable. So it has
always been, and so it will always be.
Incidentally,
it is precisely such intimacy with nature that reveals Abrahamic
religion as the ultimate scam – as nothing more than an X-rated version
of the Santa Claus myth, a tale of a vengeful god who knows if we are
“naughty or nice” and sadistically punishes our temporal failings with
the inconceivable horror of eternal torture. That is why I am always
surprised by the Christian fanaticism of so many farmers and other rural
people whose proximity to Nature should ensure their immunity to
ecclesiastical lies.
Those
of us inclined to political analysis, as I surely am, also recognize in
Abrahamic doctrines not only the opiate condemned by Marx but a
scare-fiction uniquely useful to bosses and other sorts of tyrants for
controlling the behavior of ignorant subjects. But even then, if we have
been raised in the Abrahamic traditions (which like their offspring
capitalism have now metastasized throughout our planet), some residual
fear may continue to haunt us no matter how thoroughly we have
repudiated its vengeful dogmas: thus the huge number of death-bed
conversions, an impulse of last-minute cowardice I fervently hope I will
be able to resist.
Nor
does Goddess-centered paganism offer a better alternative, as I
discovered while being repeatedly stabbed with large-gauge needles
during the nurses' apologetic but nevertheless miserably painful search
for a vein suitable for massive infusions of antibiotics. I am what in
medical parlance is called “a hard stick,” notoriously so; the
circulatory systems in my arms and hands legs and feet are shrunken by
the frostbite resulting from my childhood fall through the ice. Usually I
am able to stifle my inclination to moan and wail, but this time the
probing was genuine torture, and I was biting my lip to remain silent.
When I could not Zen myself into numbness, I prayerfully sought the
comforting arms of the Great Cosmic Mother or any other theoretical
source of mercy. Eventually the nurses found a functional vein for
their IV port. As for me, I found only darkness: the tomb of all hope,
the grave of all illusion.
LB/14 April 2016
-30-