Peculiar Destinies

I read this today from Howard Thurman: “Every person thinks that it is his peculiar destiny to have the ideal come true for him.”  It strikes me that this thinking is at the heart of all conflict, perhaps all troubles with the world.  That is, despite clear evidence that known inhabitants of this universe are not clairvoyant, and as John Andrew Holmes noted, that “the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others,” each of us envisions a “peculiar destiny “and thinks/acts toward that end.  It’s kind of easy to see how this might not end well absent some radical rethinking.  Which is perhaps where Ken Burns is headed based on this quote from a recent interview: “The thing I’ve learned is that there is no ‘them.’ It’s just us.”

Awareness

Awareness is the knowledge or perception of a situation or fact.  To become aware is to recognize that I and someone or something else share occupancy in this universe. 

Note to self — it is a really big universe.

Them/Us

“The thing that I’ve learned is that there is no ‘them.’  It’s just us”.  Ken Burns

I saw this in a New York Times interview of Burns.  In his wide range of documentary work, Burns has of course come across a lot.  Baseball, the Civil War, Hemmingway, National Parks, the Brooklyn Bridge, Country Music….  And he is, of course, correct — “there is no ‘them.’  It’s just us.”  I mean, it is so obvious that it is easy to forget, and headlines notwithstanding, last I checked, we are all occupying the same clod orbiting the same sun as it spins through the same universe.”

Enigma

The quickest, easiest, and most certain way to have more is to want less.  Yet it occurs to me that there is a quicker, easier, and more certain path — to be grateful for what I have.  These are enigmas.  I can’t explain them, but know them to be true.