Monday, January 6, 2014

How I Learned Not to Trust Myself

My good friend, Robby, takes immense joy in the holidays, but has a particular affinity for Halloween.  Astoundingly, he is able to ghoulishly transform his small apartment into an experience any haunted house would envy. 

His bedroom is a scene from Poltergeist, complete with a little girl standing and staring into a snowy television.  His nook becomes a field of cornstalks accompanied by a soundtrack of ominous crickets to keep the baleful scarecrow company.  Guarding the bathroom door is a hulking 6-and-a-half-foot demon in a black cape and mask that looks like it may pounce any minute.  He is unparalleled when it comes to creating an entire Halloween experience.

One night he invited a few of us over for a scary movie.  When each of us arrived we were greeted with a cracked door and an empty apartment.  The intent was clear.  Wander around until you have found everything that can pop out and scare you: amputated limbs, satanic handwritten notes surrounding a broken mirror and bloody bathtub, and yes--a person hiding beneath a black cloak.  He is a master trickster. 

Other than our friend, Amy, who said she would stop by later, everyone had arrived and sufficiently toured the sinister ambiance in the apartment.  We were all impressed.  Having given him adequate accolades for his efforts, we sat down to watch the movie. 

Just as the noxious opening scene ended, Robby received a message on his phone.  “My friend, Sarah, just sent me a link to this website.  ‘OMG!  This is SO COOL!!  You have to try it!’ she says.”  He looked around.  “Has anybody ever heard of it?” 

Everyone was clueless.  I’d heard the name before, but didn’t know anything about it.

The film was put on pause while Robby opened his laptop and typed in the address.  The rest of us gathered round.  It took him to a page completely blank other than a small box in the middle of the screen.  In the center of the box was a line for typing questions.  There was no additional information other than the site was an online tarot source.  This box was capable of exposing you to other realms.

We thought it was silly.  What could some random box a million cyber miles away know?  Still, we fed the curiosity.

“When will Amy get here?” Robby typed; something simple and safe, yet specific enough to avoid any generic response.

An immediate response generated.  “I don’t know, Robby.” 

He sat stunned.  “How does it know my name??” 

We sat in breathless silence, gazing from eye to eye for an answer.

“It’s your computer?” Harley offered.

Robby admitted he’d been logged into Facebook earlier.  “Maybe it accessed my Facebook account or something.”  He plopped the laptop on Kate’s lap.  “You try it and see if it says the same thing.”

Kate haltingly took her turn.  “When will Amy get here?” she typed.

Again, the response was instantaneous.  “Kate, give the computer back to Robby.”  Her arms twitched.  Kate shoved the computer off her lap.  “Ok, that is some freaky stuff!!”

The mood in the room instantly intensified.  “You guys, I absolutely believe in stuff like this!” Robby confessed.  “I am really freaked out right now!!”

"How can it see us?”  Grant pressed.  “Is there a camera in here?"  His eyes were scanning the room.

"Maybe through the TV?" Harley tried.

"Don't be silly.” I intercepted.  “They can't install secret cameras in everybody's house on the chance they will one day visit this site."

"It's only mentioned Kate and Robby by name so far,” Anna pointed out.  “They’ve both had the computer on their lap.  Maybe it's seeing them through the computer."

Robby pulled the computer in closer to block any periphery it may have.  “Can you see us?” he typed. 

“Yes,” flashed up on the screen.

“From where?” Robby probed. 

“The cornstalks.”  Chills were passed around the room as we glanced toward the faceless and wicked looking scarecrow hanging amid cornstalks in Robby’s alcove. 

Robby tested it.  "How many of us are here?"  Enter.  

I implored it to be wrong; to make one tiny mistake and show its hand; to give me the tiniest hint it was somehow guessing or pulling information about us online, anything to logically explain how this was happening.

"Six."  The answer came like a shot.  Bullseye.  

The level of panic rose.  "Ask it something no one would know!  Something non visual!" Harley was near hysterics.  "Remember the conversation we had a couple weeks ago?  Ask it what the conversation was about.  I've never told anyone that story.  There's no way it could possibly know!"

"You're right,” Robby agreed.  “Good idea!  We didn't even have that conversation in this apartment!"  Robby paused for a moment to let a slight bit of relief creep in.  "What important conversation did Harley and I have two weeks ago?" he typed.

No sooner had Robby hit enter than "His dad leaving the family." was there on the screen.

Robby practically threw the computer aside.  “HOW DOES IT KNOW ALL THIS STUFF??”  He was up on his feet, frantically pacing back and forth.

There was a menacing and ominous energy in the room and it was palpable to everyone.  Something from the dark side was tampering with us.  For the first time ever, I felt like I entered a horror movie.  Like somewhere an audience was watching us, shaking their heads at our fate.  Six single coeds in a dark, sinister room who unknowingly unlocked the door to their doom.  I knew this moment.  I'd seen it in films.  This was the moment the tremulous music built.  The moment the action hit.  The moment that makes the audience jump.  

"Shut it down," I said.  

Robby whipped his head around.  "I don't want to shut it down, I want it to go away!" he exclaimed.  "Shut it down and I'll have some demon stuck in my apartment all night!  How do I get it to go away?!!"

Gingerly, Kate picked the computer up.  "If we shut down the computer, what will happen?" she typed. 

"I'll still be here."

"That's enough!”  I commanded.  “Shut it down!"

Robby was serious.  Frantic.  He ripped the computer from Kate’s lap.  "Where are you now?"

"Above Niko's head."  

All eyes in the room shot to the air above me.  The blood in my head took the nearest exit.  Blood plummeted down my spine as though the floor of a water tower had unlatched.

The room was motionless.

"Put it away, Kate." I slid beside her and closed the laptop.

"But…  Maybe it’s good.” She tried interjecting.  “I just want to ask if it means any harm.”

"No more.” I directed.  We had trifled where we ought not long enough.  “We're all going to leave it alone and go home."

"You're leaving?!?"  Robby raved.  "Great!  Everyone is going to leave and I'll be stuck here alone with a demon!!"  He paused, shifted tones, then added, "And Niko will go home never knowing this was all a big joke on him..."

I glared at him incredulously.

It was a joke.  A rouse.  Hijinks.  They demonstrated how there is a tricky way to type in your question while simultaneously getting the computer to regurgitate whatever answer you want it to give.  They had been telling the computer what to respond.  The rest of the prank is creating a believable, dynamic group environment with trembling hands and panicked voices.  

It wasn't real.  They tricked me.  I was a pawn in an elaborate scheme of actors.  There should have been hidden cameras somewhere.

Even after finding out it was fraudulent, tremors of terror stayed with me for days.  That's how real it had been to me.  From the start the whole thing had been set up, and yet the heart-pounding fright I felt was tangible.  Powerful.  It was real to me.  At the time, my head, my heart, my soul, everything was testifying the truthfulness of an ominous presence in the room.  I am not an easily swayed person and I feared.  I feared with undisputed honesty for the well-being of myself and everyone in the room.  

In reality, it was a hoax.  Yet, the whole experience was so genuine my body manifested it through presence of mind, stomach churning, hair raising, and blood rushing.  This wasn't pretend.  It may have been the greatest acting moment of their lives, but not mine.  I believed with surety.  And I was wrong.

Isn't it amazing what words on a screen (or page) can do?  
Isn't the impact of group behavior remarkable?
Isn't it alarming how easily feelings can be created?
Isn't it interesting how easily naivety will believe what it's told/taught unquestioningly?  

Had they not come clean and confessed the ruse, I would have gone on believing it forever.  My testimony of what occurred that evening.

It is for this reason I learned it is unreliable even to trust myself.  Yes, the others put on a good show.  But, the part that really made it convincing was the fear and uneasiness I felt...I, ME, MY feelings, originating from within me.  The others didn't inject me with false feelings.  I created them.  It was me deceiving myself based on the surrounding stimuli.

When you can't trust the world, and you can't trust yourself, who can you trust?  I can hear the answer of an entire upbringing and the greater part of a nation ringing in my ears: God.  But, God is a construct taught to us by an untrustworthy world.  We believe in him because we are taught to, we believe in him because environments are powerful and our environment believes in him, but at it's most profound and solidified point, we believe in him because His truthfulness is manifested to us through our own feelings of surety.  The same irrefutable feelings of surety I felt at the party.  The feelings that resulted as part of a ploy.

I imagine people wanting to curl in a ball and cry at this point.  When you realize your belief system--the force that has shaped your entire life--has been built by following your feelings, yet even your own feelings are susceptible to deceiving you, i.e., not always intuitive, educated, or honest...it's a scary place to be. 

It is not your fault.  You are asking yourself to do something beyond your capacity.  

Humans come equipped with survival skills.  Therefore, they are made to face this world, not the next.  We are built to assess a situation--here and now.  To take every situation we encounter and determine help or hinder, secure or escape, live or die, i.e., we are made to live in the present, constantly processing information in terms of what is going to help us live another breath.  It is the predetermined way we survive to be the fittest.  We are not equipped with discernment, clairvoyance, and precognition, i.e., we are not meant to know the future, therefore, not equipped to make postmortem decisions affecting the eon of eternity.

History is actually demonstrative.  History is destined to repeat itself.  We know this.  Which means, in a way, we actually DO know the future.  We know what is going to happen because it has redundantly happened before.  So, why don't we break the repeat cycle?  Because humans, following their natural tendencies, are instinctively born to be survivors.  That means their focus is on what's in front of them and the bigger picture must take a backseat, e.g., getting food on the table for my family is greater than/more important than the national budget, debt, and ultimately state of our nation.  Food keeps me alive, the rest is somebody else's problem.  

Disciples would argue our lack of ability to see the bigger picture is necessary for faith.  Knowing the future would alter our course and eliminate learning, growth, choice, and the test of loyalty (which is what religion is seeking).  The problem is ALL religions assert their authenticity.  Aside from picking one at random to blindly follow, how are we to know which is correct?  As previously proven, we are capable of believing any one of them with absolute surety given the right stimuli.  Are we to place our faith on a dart and throw?

Perhaps it is advantageous, then, not to search for unearthly truth (which is impossible), but instead to search out what is most beneficial.  I find love, knowledge, and selflessness beneficial.  I do not find fear, shame, and coercion beneficial.

I believe in the potential truth.  I believe all ideas have likelihood to be truthful.  Believing in the potential truth eliminates doubt.  There is no reason to worry it might not be true because I already believe it might not be true.  It also eliminates any disappointment or feelings of betrayal should a philosophy be proven false.  I can't be disappointed or betrayed when I knew there was a possibility this might happen all along.  It's an interesting paradox: people pay their beliefs to religion in exchange for peace, security, and comfort, when all along the greatest security lies in maintaining doubt.

Maintaining doubt does not mean I live in doubt, or anything nearly so pessimistic.  Quite the opposite, actually.  I more-than-less live in belief!  I'm a great collector of ideas.  I love a plethora of postulations.  I’m interested in pallets of varying hues versus buckets of black and white.  I extract what I find beneficial from each philosophy like a bee.  A bee who collects only the pollen from each flower he visits.  This allows me to build my own personal hive of convictions.

Allowing ideas to percolate with an open mind is easy when one has the tranquility to admit his own ideas might be wrong no matter how much he believes he is right.  Sift through ideas letting the nonsense and the non-applicable slip through the sieve while keeping the beneficial nuggets.  Becoming your own benefactor will lead to an overall greater sense of happiness, and happiness is a great compass for decision making.

I know, I know…  I just finished prosecuting the trustworthiness of one's own feelings.  Now we're supposed to trust ourselves to know what makes us happy?? 

On eternal matters, trusting one's own feelings is particularly faulty (as we are not made to handle such matters).  But, in the present--assessing moment to moment, as is our naturally selected capability--what better guide do we have?  Our feelings are the best resource available.  When we follow a predetermined course it is easy to end up far from our destination.  It is only through a constant, ever-present pattern of checking in for reevaluation we ensure we are on our path to happiness.

In 1979 a large passenger jet with 257 people on board left New Zealand for a sightseeing flight to Antarctica and back.  Unknown to the pilots, however, someone had modified the flight coordinates by a mere two degrees.  This error placed the aircraft 28 miles (45 km) to the east of where the pilots assumed they were.  As they approached Antarctica, the pilots descended to a lower altitude to give the passengers a better look at the landscape.  Although both were experienced pilots, neither had made this particular flight before, and they had no way of knowing that the incorrect coordinates had placed them directly in the path of Mount Erebus, an active volcano that rises from the frozen landscape to a height of more than 12,000 feet (3,700 m).

As the pilots flew onward, the white of the snow and ice covering the volcano blended with the white of the clouds above, making it appear as though they were flying over flat ground.  By the time the instruments sounded the warning that the ground was rising fast toward them, it was too late.  The airplane crashed into the side of the volcano, killing everyone on board.

It was a terrible tragedy brought on by a minor error—a matter of only a few degrees.

Suppose you were to take off from an airport at the equator, intending to circumnavigate the globe, but your course was off by just one degree.  By the time you returned to the same longitude, how far off course would you be?  A few miles?  A hundred miles? The answer might surprise you.  An error of only one degree would put you almost 500 miles (800 km) off course, or one hour of flight for a jet.

No one wants his life to end in tragedy.  But all too often, like the pilots and passengers of the sightseeing flight, we set out on what we hope will be an exciting journey only to realize too late that an error of a few degrees has set us on a course for spiritual disaster.

--Dieter F. Uchtdorf
A Matter of a Few Degrees

Ironically, I lifted (or usurped, depending on how adverse you are to this post) this passage from a talk given at a conference for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons).  Its intent at the conference was to inspire strict allegiance to the gospel principles of the LDS church.  It imparts a policy of refraining from ever questioning, ever pondering, and ever experimenting with anything that may derail one from the path the church has set forth [through divine revelation from God] as Righteousness.  Interestingly, I believe this story provides the opposite lesson!

The tragedy of this example is not that the plane veered off course.  Believe it or not, the tragedy is that the plane held to the course unwaveringly!  Incorrect coordinates are a tiny mistake; easily identifiable and easily remedied to any pilot taking stock of his flight path.  New Zealand to Antarctica is a long flight.  How many minutes went by, and how many opportunities did the pilots have to reevaluate, assess the situation, and reorient the plane?  Had the pilots been checking in every minute, every 10 minutes, every hour; had they taken a couple detours or made a few stops along the way to confirm they were plotting the right course, the incident would never have happened.  The tragedy is not that a mistake was made, but that the mistake was never corrected.

Mind you, not all mistakes are regrettable!  It is only in hindsight the true nature of mistakes is revealed.  Not all mistakes need correction, and not all deviations are mistakes.  Most of the world was discovered by happenstance.  So, too, is character.  Mistakes are not the enemy, they are the teacher; a guide; a catalyst to compare against the status quo.  They should be cherished for the constructive self-evaluation they incite.  Failure to question and consider is where the pilots went wrong.

How can anyone know who they are, or what they believe, unless they know who they are not and what they disbelieve?

Imagine you begin as a waffle cone.  This cone represents you: your personality, your being, your beliefs, your choices, your paths…  And, the inalienable right of life is that you get to fill it with whatever flavor(s) you desire.

From the beginning, many will tell you you can't go wrong with vanilla.  Pure vanilla is the key to happiness.  Vanilla is nice--and certainly the most popular flavor--but if all you ever have is vanilla, how will you ever know there is not a better flavor?  The whole point in having a cone is finding your unique combination of flavors.  

You dip your spoon in mocha almond fudge.  Too bitter for your taste.  Moving on.  Strawberry cheesecake?  A bit too tart.  Cookies and cream?  That hits the spot!  Cookies and cream goes in your cone.

And, so it goes; sampling; careful that only flavors with the most benefit are added to your cone.  Some flavors are easily added--it's a no brainer that butter pecan is good.  Others are easily discarded--your tongue knows when it never wants to taste lime sherbet again.  Still, others are an acquired taste--you may doubt mint chocolate chip at first, but down the line you'll wonder how you ever lived without it.  

Fear of a flavor is unnecessary.  If you don't like it you move on to the next and leave the unsavory behind.  Simple as that.  Occasionally, tastes change.  A flavor you once enjoyed may now turn your stomach.  This sometimes happens.  No problem!  Scoop the venom back out!  Will it come out cleanly?  Not likely.  Depending on how long it's been in the cone, it will probably have melded to other portions.  It may take time and meticulous care, but it is worth the effort to keep your cone tasting the way you want it, free from any undesirable muddling.
      
Life is not a yellow brick road to be tip-toed along because a being in a bubble said it was the only correct path.  Life is a hike.  It winds.  Sometimes uphill.  And sometimes an easy slalom downhill.  Sometimes a taxing swim cross a wide river.  And sometimes a meadowy roll down a knoll.  It is to be seen, smelled, felt, heard, tasted, pondered, questioned, tried, and experimented so that you may decide for yourself what you like, what makes you happy, and what doesn't.

Life belongs to the vulnerable: those brave enough to take a chance because they know a side-step can be just as easily aligned as it can be enlightening, and those valorous enough to know the only valid place to place trust--scarily enough--is in the moment.  Every moment.  For moments are all we have.  All we know.  Nothing more.  Each moment is a paradox: both new and continuous. That means each moment presents us with an opportunity; a lifeline; a chance to change; to correct; to take an alternate course; to climb on the back of a new moment and see where it takes us, all while simultaneously presenting us with the comfort and security of standing on that which will always be there: the continuous.  All paradoxes are unique and special.  What a gift these paradoxes are.  These moments.  

One inevitable truth of this life is no gift may ever remain with its owner.  Heirlooms must be passed on, as must our flesh and bones.  To whom shall you give yours?  Whom do you trust to receive your moments?  Posterity?  The air?  The new?  The continuous?  
  

I am not trustworthy.  I know that.  No one is.  The best I can do is trust the moment.  But, in this moment, I trust who I am.  I trust myself.