Sightings
1/22/09
An Inner Life with New Meaning
-- Krista Tippett
As the indicators by which we've measured our collective
well-being in recent years continue to plummet, I found a
conversation with Parker Palmer echoing in my head. He and
I spoke years ago on the radio program Speaking of Faith
about his mid-life experience of clinical depression, about
which he has written searchingly and made rich sense in
later life. He told me about a psychiatrist who helped him
move to a new level of healing by asking him, "Could you
begin to imagine your depression not as an enemy that is
crushing you — but as a friend pressing you down to ground
on which it is safe to stand?" His description of the
unrealistically elevated heights of ego and freneticism that
preceded his psychological depression — an unsustainable,
inflated sense of what is normal — was startlingly analogous
with our economic present.
And of the "economic terrors that now engulf us," Parker
Palmer makes this plain but startling observation: "At some
level most of us knew they were coming." We know that we
can't live forever beyond our means, that unregulated greed
cannot end well, that a cycle of prosperity that brings
unparalleled wealth while simultaneously impoverishing an
ever wider population will eventually yield to that
imbalance. In recent years many of us have suspended this
knowledge in favor of optimism and opportunities based on
facts and figures — "the numbers," as my colleagues at
Marketplace say — that we began to collectively accept as a
surer reality.
The knowledge we need to reckon morally and spiritually with
the place we're in now — the commonplace knowledge that
might have shielded us from some of the human wreckage that
is being wrought — comes, Parker Palmer says, "from a place
deeper than our intellects." During a bull market, such talk
might sound sentimental, fanciful, and irrelevant. Yet as
the numbers betrayed us, the ubiquitous talk even among
economists has been of a loss of "faith" in the market. We
are given to realize anew that, even in the realm of
commerce and finance, human emotion and desire shape our
most concrete endeavors. Fear and greed, for example,
helped create the illusions behind hedge funds, subprime
mortgages, and derivatives that we accepted, for a time, as
the contours of solid economic reality.
This kind of truth telling — this correction, if you will —
is sobering, but it is also good news. The numbers don't
become irrelevant now, but we can see their limits more
clearly, and give due attention to other modes of analysis
that complete and anchor our humanity. We can tap more
seriously into the practical resources that religious and
spiritual traditions have mined for centuries. They offer
wisdom that can invigorate and refresh our common
reflection. They speak about abundance and scarcity in
non-material terms, about violence and nonviolence in
everyday life, and about acknowledging fear without being
consumed and guided by it.
Dr. Rachel Naomi Remen, a pioneer in exploring the overlap
between spiritual and physical health, points out that the
questions we're pondering in our financial and family lives
now are essentially spiritual questions. What does it mean
to live a worthy, if not wealthy, life? What is genuinely
important, and what can I genuinely live without? What are
my children learning from this moment? Who and what do I
trust in, and why? And how, in my immediate world, will I
respond and take responsibility for the consequences of
human and societal wreckage that we are about to experience?
I'm well aware of the ease — the danger — of making lofty
observations on the virtue that might emerge from economic
crisis, when human beings are falling through the cracks all
around us. I believe that as we learn to speak about the
important questions in our lives in new, fresh, and vivid
ways, we can also live them differently together. In the
new conversations that this moment makes possible, we must
summon practical wisdom and collective courage.
For further information:
My recent conversations with Parker Palmer and Dr. Rachel
Naomi Remen are part of a wider project at Speaking of Faith
(http://speakingoffaith.publicradio.org/)
called "Repossessing Virtue," in which we hope you and many
others will be involved. We've been inviting reflections
from listeners and readers on the moral, spiritual, and
human aspects of economic crisis. We're also calling up a
range of wise former guests on Speaking of Faith and
gathering their ruminations. You can listen to those briefer
conversations with the wonderful Martin Marty, stress
researcher Esther Sternberg, Swiss banker Prabhu Guptara,
"new monastic" Shane Claiborne, and Benedictine author and
activist Sr. Joan Chittister. Visit
http://speakingoffaith.publicradio.org/first-person/repossessing-virtue/.
Krista Tippett is the host of American Public Media's
Speaking of Faith.
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Sightings comes from the
Martin Marty Center
at the University of Chicago Divinity School.
Attribution:
Columns may be quoted or republished in full, with
attribution to the author of the column, Sightings,
and the Martin Marty Center at the University of Chicago
Divinity School.
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