Wednesday 14 August 2013

BETWEEN THE “EGO” AND “I”

BETWEEN THE “EGO” AND “I”
Preface
The current industrial action by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) if anything positive at all, has offered me the ever longing opportunity to see the small but sensitive issues of life in a whole new perspective. I have been spending the unplanned free time with a mentee (Godwin Agweyi) who has actually being a thought provoking company. In a bid to maximize the time available we embarked on some special readings –both spiritual and secular. One of such readings turned out to be a book I read in the past, but this time my study seems to be revealing more facts about life than ever before. Perhaps am reading the book from a more relaxed position than I ever did. The idea I will be sharing is culled from the first chapter of Fulton Sheen’s 1950 work titled “Lift up Your Heart”. A book his reviewers’ hailed as Sheen at his best and I also concur with.

Our struggle with false Duality of life
The lives of the two self cannot be lived simultaneously. If we attempt to do so, we will suffer remorse, anxiety and dissatisfaction.  Candidly if true freedom is to be found within ourselves, the ego must yield itself to our true personality, but the seeming self is a familiar companion to some persons that it cannot be easily dropped, nor is it of any use to tell them that this superficial self has no legitimate place within them. Like an unwanted part of a plant, the false ego must be cut away and pulled off for the real personality (the I) to surface unhindered. Surely, this is a process that involves detachment which will always have the elements of pain and some indignity attached!
The attribution of a natural man depicts a false duality when the ego dominates his live. This ill character waxes better as we subtle exhibit, unwittingly its inherent properties. When ego gains a stronger ground over the true I in our lives the followings becomes evident:
Ø  We blame little faults in others, and excuse our great offense;
Ø  We see the mote in our neighbour’s eye, and not the beam in our own;
Ø  We wrong others, and deny that there is any guilt;
Ø  Others do the same wrong to us, and we say that they should have known better;
Ø  We hate others, and call it “zeal”;
Ø  We flatter others because of what they can do for us, or what we hope to get from them and call it “love”;
Ø  We lie to people and call it “tact” or “smartness”;
Ø  We slowly deny the rights of God in public and call it “prudence”;
Ø  We selfishly push others aside and call it “getting our just rights” or perhaps being the “sharp-guy”;
Ø  We judge others, and say we are “facing the fact”;
Ø  We refuse to give up our life of sin, and call anyone who does so an “escapist”.
Ø  We overeat, and call it “health”;
Ø  We pileup more wealth than is necessary for our state in life, and call it “security”;
Ø  We resent the wealth of others, and call ourselves “defenders of the downtrodden” or “liberators”;
Ø  We deny inviolable principles of law, plant our feet firmly in midair, and call ourselves “liberal”.
Ø  We begin sentence with “I” –and condemn our neighbours as bore for wanting to talk about themselves, when indeed we want to talk more about ourselves;
Ø  We legitimize the new ruin of family life by divorce-and say we have to “live our own lives”;
Ø  We believe we are virtuous-merely because we found someone who is vicious;
Ø  Our sloth and laziness we call “living sensibly”;
Ø  We disguise our psychological reluctance to genuine work by clamouring for a social system in which the President of the country or the political class must do everything;
Ø  We want so much love, that we forget to love others;
Ø  We nurse our own troubles so much that we fail to see the issues of others;
Ø  We possess money, and therefore think that we have worth;
Ø  We acquire certifications and call those who did not make it through school “academically lazy”;
Ø  We define others failure in life as a lack of ingeniousness or creativity;
Ø  We call our success the product of brilliance, hard work and dedication;
Ø  We criticize others unjustly, with the excuse that they should know the truth about themselves;
Ø  We judge our virtues by the vice from which we abstain. Perhaps since we do not smoke all smokers must be on their way to hell;
Ø  We boast of the tinsel wrapping on the box of our lives, and call it “glamour”;
Ø  We refuse to make our minds about anything, and boast that we are being broad-minded.
I cannot literally exhaust the list of life’s issues that represent us as the false personality we though project to the world and are truly not. These are the temptations to which we are all prone when we allow the ego in us to become supreme.
Those who glorify the ego, or the seeming-self, often develop a vicarious interest in solving problems that do not concern them, as a substitute for tackling their own problem of selfishness.
I really wonder if our contemporary interest in other’s horror stories is not an admission that millions of us feel the need to solve important personal problems; but rather than facing the riddles of self, which are indeed difficult, we shift the problem and study baffling events of other people’s life instead.
The man who has horrors tormenting his own soul may like to hear of greater horrors in others or to see them on the screen, in order that he may for a moment forget his own hell within; and in some cases create a self-righteous persona of the events around him.
In talking about others we ask subtle questions such as:
Why doesn’t he/ her recognize his or her faults? The obvious reason is that the “he” or “she” been referred to here has never practiced self-introspection- a state of inner personal cleansing and inspection. Their ego has obscured their I; hence egoism has drowned out their personality. On the other hand, those who see the faults of others are sometimes-not-always unconsciously revealing their own weaknesses; for how can one of us say of another “she is jealous” or “he is arrogant” unless we already knew in our hearts how it felt to be jealous or arrogant. 
As I studied the works of Sheen further, I knew he had more to write than was printed. But beyond his chastening of the false identity in us, our every attempt at judging our neighbours’ particularly for self gratification is in its self a self-revelation of our weaknesses!
The very touchiness and sensitiveness of some people about themselves, their violent way of reaction to criticism, is an indication of how much they protect their false ego and how little courage they have in daring to let their real self stand the light of day! This is even so because the “ego” and the “I” or the superficial self and the real self are related as the husk to the seed, thus the “I” is not revealed until the ego is removed! A mango does not become a tree until the outer covering pulp is shed and the seed is set free to grow!
As I conclude am reminded of a statement a friend once made-that if it was possible to sit at a balcony and watch ourselves pass-by we will surely say crazy things about how we look, walk and even the way we exchange pleasantries!
Dear friends the moral in the whole piece is for us to uninstall the self-gratifying personality in us and install the true and real us. Seeking to heal the wounds of others at the detriment of our sores will worsen our case. Some real elements of humility practically applied can be of real help. If I must advice further before you make you next critical assessments of your neighbour please check through the list above to be sure your intent is right! Again, we can begin by scanning through the categories of egoism listed above to delete those that do not apply to us and attempt at correcting those we are preys of.
Till I have another opportunity of writing to you in this manner please struggle to develop the real you (i.e. the “I”). Live your life in constant self-introspection and as much as you can esteem others more than yourself.
Thank you


Olayinka Moses