Leaving The Church of Free Market Miracles: Where does one find succor and seeds of renewal in times such as these?
by Phil Rockstroh
Most of the men I grew up with in Alabama
and Georgia deny the veracity of climate change. They are unwilling to
make the connection between their ownership (actually the bank's) of
SUVs and oversized pickup trucks and the super storms and massive floods
that, now with alarming regularity, ravish the region.
Because
their besieged sense of self is intermeshed with their motor vehicles,
they hold fast to these symbols of the fading world they know. In their
imaginings, these gruesome, noxious (and obnoxious) machines represent
power and mobility -- exactly the aspects of their lives that have been
diminished by the demands and degradations of oligarchic capitalism.
By
their self-imprisonment in these sorts of compensatory fantasies, they
choose to risk their children's future, rather than, as one victim of
his own curdling testosterone expressed to me recently on FaceBook,
"[give up his over-sized pick-up]
and drive a 4-wheel vagina, algore-mobile."
"Everything
that everyone is afraid of has already happened: The fragility of
capitalism, which we don't want to admit; the loss of the empire of the
United States; and American exceptionalism. In fact, American
exceptionalism is that we are exceptionally backward in about fifteen
different categories, from education to infrastructure. But we're in a
stage of denial: we want to re-establish things as they used to be, to
put the country back where it
was."
- James Hillman
A deep-rooted,
malignant anger regarding their diminished sense of manhood seethes at
the core of pronouncements such as that, and the following, shared on my
FaceBook scroll, this past Earth Day: "Happy Earhart day!!! How did you
celebrate? I clubbed an adorable baby harp seal, dumped a barrel of
waste oil down the storm drain, and started a giant tire fire!!! Good
times…."
The sentiment expressed above is an imprecatory
prayer, borne of uneasy submission i.e., the callow voice of deep
denial, a manifestation of a culturally re-enforced, self-protective
cynicism -- a reflexive negation of novel ideas that masks a besieged
psyche; it is the nihilistic rage appropriated by the powerless serving
as a bulwark against the anxiety created by shifting circumstances and
buffeted verities.
In the U.S., life keeps changing for the
working class -- and not for the better. Hence, an inner voice
of doubt and despair falsely informs these men that the agents and
effects of change will be of no help to them personally…that no one
(especially smug, know-it-all liberals) can be of service to you, and,
worse, what little you have amassed will be lost.
It is a common
(unspoken) fear of the men I grew up around down south that if they
were to let go of what little they clutch, nothing would arrive to
replace what would be lost. There will be no place reserved for them and
their families in the new situations and novel arrangements that (by
their addled take on the situation) elitist environmentalist snobs
contrive to force upon them.
Moreover, in the corporate state,
the loss of community, in combination with the commercially-rendered
sameness of the environment and the all-encompassing, manic insistency
of mass media -- both of which are so devoid of depth, context and
meaning -- it has become increasingly difficult for an
individual to gain then retain the sense of self necessary to know
where one exists in relationship to time, place, and changing social and
political circumstance.
How is it possible to move in the
direction of propitious change when the demands and distractions of the
corporate/consumer state have negated one's ability to remain still and
focus long enough to even grasp the nature of the problem?
The
relentless exploitation of both earthscape and timescape has had a
catastrophic effect upon the inner realms of thoughts, dreams, and
imaginings of the citizen/consumers of the neo-liberal economic
superstate.
Loss of place and an attendant crisis of identity
are inextricably bound to the angst and anomie so evident in the present
neo-liberal epoch: Being bereft of connection to land, sky, sea, and
polis creates a profound sense of unease.
In contrast, a
powerful sense of presence rises from within when standing before
oceans, rivers, mountains, and even amid streams of human currents
traversing the streets and boulevards of great cities. Conversely, where
are we, in relationship to the truths of our being, when we are waiting
for an order of processed, fast food in a line of automobiles idling at
a drive-thru window or we are engaged in hollow communion with the
sundry, glowing screens of information age appliances?
One's
sense of self and one's beliefs, as well as, the mythos and traditions
of a people are inextricably bound with place, landscape, and social
situation. When I was a child, growing up in Alabama and Georgia, on
occasions such as backcountry fishing expeditions, I would, at times,
come in contact with rural African American farmers who still lived by
the agrarian rhythms of the nineteenth century.
Occasionally,
taking refuge from the afternoon heat of high summer, we would lounge on
wooden porches and snap green beans, and I would
listen as they quoted scripture.
The Jesus of their belief
system was born of humble beginnings (a mere seed) and grew beneath the
hot sun, but, at the height of maturity, was cut down, sacrificed so
they may live, then, like their life-sustaining crops, was resurrected
as next year's seed crop. Suffused with a metaphoric analog of the
criteria they lived day to day, these tales held resonance for these
rural, farming people; the metaphors resounded with the verities of
place and circumstance. The figure of Christ was as real to them as the
snap beans beneath their fingertips.
Now, in an era in which the
destination of most all of our objects and accoutrement is the
landfill, Deep South mega-churches espouse a cosmology that resonates
from a junk food paradigm: a Gospel of The Drive Thru Jesus…when The
Rapture comes our corporeal bodies will be cast aside like fast food
wrappers.
All in all, for both Christians and for
secular-minded, market economy true believers, a belief in economic
providence has proven our undoing -- an insistence on its miraculous
influence left us mistaking ad-hoc, bubble-borne affluence for a
soul-vivifying portion of divine grace. The corporate/consumer state's
trickster gods of fast buck commerce offer drive-thru-window epiphanies.
Members of the congregation of the Church of Free Market miracles
believe their prayers will always be answered: Instantly, the consumer
state's homilies of perpetual gratification arrive -- their voices
crackling like a burning bush from drive-thru order-boxes.
Yet
the redeemer gods of product placement cannot provide our dying culture
with a longer shelf life. Belief in the deities of empyreal marketplace
might provisionally banish doubt and diffidence -- yet this mythos
cannot shelter us from the anonymous fury of the exponential mathematics
of global systems shifted into entropic runaway.
Although every generation inherits a howling wasteland and
dwells in structures constructed of the bleached bone legacy of past
generations -- you'd have to go back to Late Cretaceous to find a
generation that stands at the threshold of a mass die-off as we human
beings do at present.
The Greek tragedians would have grasped
the manic and destructive nature of late capitalism…how an obsessively
heroic quest for victory carries the seeds of one's undoing; ergo, by
an over-reliance on his strengths and virtues the classical hero brought
on his own demise -- because the habit of heroic action rendered him
closed off to novel awareness.
Victory is a closed system; in contrast, defeat opens one to the possibility of new adaptations.
You win a while, and then it’s done –
Your little winning streak.
And summoned now to deal
With your invincible defeat,
--Leonard Cohen
In
the case of Greek tragedy, the
hero (even the collective mindset of a people) cannot, in the long run,
thrive evincing victory-engendered hubris. He will wend towards
tragedy; he, with each successive triumph, will become so
self-encapsulated with self-regard that only trauma will reopen his
heart to the intimacies availed by earth and eternity
Jason will
ignore all council and bring his trophy of war, Medea, back to Corinth,
setting events in motion that will cause him to lose everything he
loves. He will die alone, in demented revelry, crushed beneath the
rotting stern of the Argo, the ship that bore him to glory.
You lose your grip, and then you slip
Into the Masterpiece.
--Leonard Cohen
Apropos,
facing tragedy, to paraphrase Camus, is the opposite of naivety. Yet we
go on, even though we think we cannot, when we bear the knowledge of
the ultimate futility of our aspirations. Although struggling against
overwhelming power and collective delusion seems
futile, such endeavors thwart one's drive for perfection: When we seek
paradise, we find paradox. Over the long term, the manner we receive,
respond, and are changed by these exchanges with the world is called
(our) character.
In the sorrow of defeat, one gains the
possibility of identification with the oppressed people of the earth.
Loss brings an intermingling with the inherent beauty of the neglected
things of the world.
It's evident
the art of losing's not too hard to master
though it may look like (Write it!) a disaster. 
--Elizabeth Bishop
In
my better (too rare) moments, I take Walt Whitman's approach: I believe
an individual should endeavor to connect, mingle, even merge one’s
broken heart with the various and varied things of the world…polis,
people, and landscape.
There are many things, although vile and
ugly, I remain on speaking terms with, extant and within me. Although,
our cities are
decayed, people troubled and landscapes degraded, I don't avoid those
places and situations -- because this is the criteria with which I was
given to work, by time and circumstance.
Even, at present, towards empire's end, when we find ourselves bearing much grief, we are stranded amid ferocious beauty.
Where does one find succor and seeds of renewal in times such as these?
It
might prove helpful to glance back at what has been dubbed the
“do-it-yourself-art" practiced by the pioneers of Punk Rock.
Bored
blind by tedious, onanistic guitar solos of the arena rock era, they
approached their instruments with a minimalistic aesthetic. In other
words, many burned with such fervor to seize back rock and roll from the
stultifying, velvet rope elitism of the period that they had neither
the time nor inclination to master more than three cords on their
instruments -- which they played very fast -- and did for scant
financial
compensation, and even less acclaim, in shot-out clubs in decayed
downtown locations such as Manhattan's Bowery district, thus
reintroducing the dirty, lowdown exuberance and subversive intimacy of
early rock and roll, plus establishing the enduring principle that being
an imbecilic, rock and roll egoist should be a democratic process —
not exclusively limited to guitar technocrats or even those individuals
possessed of the tyranny of talent.
Accordingly, we can
cultivate gardens (individual and communal) appropriating the ash of
yesterday's excesses and the mulch of victories long past; we can plant
heirloom seeds, both terrestrial and mnemonic. Thus beginning to allow
our lives to become imbrued with the purpose and meaning that arrives
when one's labors are directed at making the world anew. While one
cannot know the future, one can begin to move away from a reliance upon a
dysfunctional present.
Phil Rockstroh is a poet, lyricist
and philosopher bard living in New York City. He may be contacted at:
phil@philrockstroh.com. Visit Phil's website http://philrockstroh.com/
And at FaceBook: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000711907499
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