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Thoughts arising from comments to one of [livejournal.com profile] telynor’s posts, about the attitude of people whose lives revolve around their day jobs to those who pursue their creative dreams:

Everyone’s heard (or used) the phrase, of anyone who for whatever reason doesn’t have a regular job: “They think the world owes them a living.” This phrase (yes, I know it’s a sentence, and quite a severe one as well, with no time off for good behaviour) bothers the hell out of me. Partly this is because I am by nature idle and hate being made to feel guilty for not loving to work, partly because I have a knee-jerk adverse reaction to the hardline-Heinlein life-is-real-life-is-Algernon work-or-starve gung-ho worldview. Neither of these reactions is significant, both being flaws in my character that I probably won’t succeed in shifting at this late stage.

Partly, though, it bothers me because I dislike the idea of seeing life as a matter of debts and obligations. Clearly, to people who say this, it is a fact that, if the world doesn’t owe me a living, then obviously I must owe it one. I must pay back my life, in daily increments, to strangers who already get the benefit of the lives of many others. There is no element of choice. It’s what you do. Taking time out to be creative, especially unpaid, or even worse simply to play, is wasting something that doesn’t actually belong to me, that was mortgaged when I was born. And there’s no upper limit to the repayments. Even when I get too old to work for a living (however that will be defined by the time it happens) there will be this sense of indebtedness. I should be grateful for whatever microscopic amount of pension I get, because it’s really charity and I should be doing something in return.

This is a rich planet, as John Brunner said many years ago, and I live in one of the richest societies on it, and we are all bowed down by this culture of debt. But life is a gift. It’s not owed; it’s given. Talents are gifts. Strength and wit and even beauty are gifts, with no price tag. And I wonder how it would be if ours were a culture of giving, rather than owing: if we were brought up to believe that we are all immensely rich in ourselves, and that the way to make the best of our riches is to give them to the world, as the world gives to us. Give our time and our energy to help others, as we are given the means to live. Give of our talent to make the world even more beautiful, as others make it more beautiful for us. Give our lives, not because we owe them, but because we have them.

Stupidly idealistic, yes, probably. But do we begrudge our efforts and our time because we feel them being demanded of us, as of right, and that less than the equitable value is being tendered in return? Have we learned to look at the world as a marketplace, where everything has to be haggled over, bought cheap and sold dear, as if there were some scarcity? Can this view be changed, and would the world grind to a shuddering halt if it were?

Date: 2005-08-24 08:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pbristow.livejournal.com
I think what you're looking for is the Kingdom of Heaven, which does indeed run on the very principle of "forget what's owed, and just give whatever you can give, in confidence that you will never be left to run short (and in fact will be blessed many-fold).". It's an application of the general principle of "never mind fulfilling the needs of the law and then breathing a sigh of relief that you've achieved what's necessary; just set your heart on doing all the good you can do", which in turn is the corollary of "don't worry about the occasions where you 'screw up' and fail to meet the minimum requirement of the law, because under this new deal, all such instances are forgiven".

And we are encouraged to learn those heavenly attitudes and principles, by exercising them right here on earth. I think the point that most people miss is that we need to practice them here in the world as it is today *understanding that they very often won't work as intended here*, because the world is poisoned. But by trying out the "new deal", and seeing how it works on the odd occasion where it really *does* work, we gain confidence (akak faith) that such a world really is possible, and really is heavenly, if (and only if) *everyone* there subscribes to those principles. And we eventually (hopefully) gain enough confidence to apply the same principles in our relationship with the biggest, scariest debt-collector (if we choose to view him as such) of them all, who is also the biggest, most wonderfully loving gift-giver of them all (if we allow him to be); the one guy who we *certainly* have to be able to get along with if we want to be part of the Kingdom of Heaven, because, well, he's the king, y'see.

And that's why not everyone goes to Heaven: Because some people simply refuse to allow Heaven's *essential* operating principles into their lives.

Because, y'see, the other way of looking at things? The frantically tracking who owes who for what and how much and "is it OK to stop and take a break yet *pleeeeeeeease*...."? That's called Hell.

Date: 2005-08-24 01:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stevieannie.livejournal.com
I understand that you'd probably want to run very hard in the other direction, but your turn of phrase and ability to put over complex theological issues so succintly makes me think you'd be great at either missionary work or working with young adults in a church situation.

Beautiful words. :-)

Date: 2005-08-27 01:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pbristow.livejournal.com
Eep! [DUCKS BEHIND ANNIE TO HIDE FROM ALL THE SCARY "YOOF"S]

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