nationElectric ([info]nationelectric) wrote,
@ 2006-11-12 01:43:00
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A reminder:

People under the age of 20 have this massive hole in their soul. And they have built their personalities around cynicism. Cynicism means, simply, aping or putting into an ironic form, mocking, existing institutions, instead of building institutions of your own. What I’ve discovered is that because these people have such a deep need for something to believe in that if someone like you, who has a powerful set of beliefs, or someone like I, who has a powerful set of beliefs—I’ve been searching the Gods all my life and now I know them, the Gods inside of us. Or I feel I do. Someone like me or you who can come along and show these people that there is a meaning to life, that there are things worth believing in, that there are things worth being passionate about, they respond immediately. Now, we're either going to have the new Adolf Hitler’s coming along, who know how to manipulate this need, and do it with the new nationalisms and the new tribalism's, and the new hate groups, or we're going to have a you or a me, who will come along and pour a positive message—a positive sense of something to believe in, a positive crusade for emotionality.

The only messiahs who exist are as human beings. We human beings are all basically cockroaches at heart. That is to say, we're insecure when we’re alone by ourselves, we have all kinds of self-doubts, we have our depressions, and we have all kinds of reasons to believe that we're nobody at all. But it's the “nobodys-at-all” who become the Isaiahs of the world, it's the “nobodys-at-all” who become the Einstein’s of the world, it's the “nobodys-at-all” who become the Jesus Christ’s of the world. And it's incumbent on us, having learnt the lesson—we’ve been able to learn a lesson from the history of Christianity. Jesus put together a movement that was based on respect for the humble and the poor, on seeing their possibilities, on seeing that they had to be treated as human beings too.

But what happened to his message? When it was taken over 322 years later by Constantine, Constantine had the cross painted on the shields of his men. And suddenly, Christianity became an excuse for mass murder. Christ would never have allowed that. OK, we know that now. And we know that Christ was just as human as anybody else. Why did he cry out, “My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?” when he was on the cross? Because he was insecure about everything he had believed in up until then. He was as human as we are.

It's up to human beings to be the messiahs. We're the only ones who are there to do it. And we have to do it. We have to do it. Because if we don't do it, someone with an equal belief and passion to ours, who believes that the way to achieve things is through the old animal way (...) built into our limbic system, built into the lower parts of our brain, who knows that the best way to unite people is by uniting them in hatred against an outside group; and uniting them in mass murder.

We have to come along before that person comes along. We have to fill that void, and we have to fill it with positivity. It’s about digging into the elemental passions (...) All of this plays a part in trying to give to the new generation a movement that's based on something extraordinarily passionate. That you can powerfully believe in. That you can use to advance humanity tremendously, absolutely tremendously—but that excises, deliberately, the God of War.

When you find the Gods inside yourself, you'll find the God of War. You'll find the God of bloodlust. You'll find the God of genocide. And he will be one of the most powerful passions in you. And you have to knife him out of existence. You have to freeze him in his own private Hell, and make your positive Gods the Gods that take you over.

And by “the Gods that take you over” I mean you have to find those passions that are so much more powerful than you, than anything you've been allowed to express in your life, and making those things the things you work on. In other words, not putting off until you’re 40 or 50 the things you feel passionate about at the age of 15 and 16 - but going directly to those things, and trying to implement them when you're 20.

Pass 'Go'. Forget the 200 dollars. Go directly to Park Place. And put your life there, on the line, with all the emotion and power and passion and insight in you.

And fuck the God of War.


Howard Bloom, via here.



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[info]heatherthegreat
2006-11-13 04:09 am UTC (link)
I was at dinner party with a friend of mine who is madly in love with an 18 year old. This young girl and her friend were also at dinner along with a few other people. They were dressed like those hip emo kids that don't think they're being hip. She and her friend said NOTHING the entire time. They sat with their eyes down, picking at their food, looking bored. When dinner was over, they only said goodbye to the man of the hour and continued looking bored or disinterested or something. I found it revolting and sad. I wanted to shake them and scream "what's the matter with you? are you even alive? do you feel anything?" I can't express the horror I felt watching these two young girls behave as if they were dead. I didn't know what to do so I left them alone.

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[info]aethyrflux
2006-11-13 05:04 am UTC (link)
i find it ironic that Bloom would fixate upon "20-year old" apathy & angst... from what i understand, he has been known to develop more than a little unrequited fondness for lolita... although i don't mean to cast stones, or criticize the kettle, myself...
no matter what our age, any of us may have to suffer through the dark night of the soul, at some point.
and at any time, any of us can commit to a path of heroism, or at least, what we perceive to be so...
i do agree with Bloom's sentiment to seize the day, though!

and yes, there does seem to be something missing in the lives of many of these disillusioned youth, most of whom have not experienced any sort of rites of passage, or any other sort of recognition of their station in the community.
but i don't think that it's really all that different from the attitude that many baby boomers developed in the sixties, or the perspective that any group of people adopts at any other time of "cultural revolution."
there are idealists in this current age group, as well: some of them continue to fuel the fires of political protests, for instance...
although i agree that overstimulation and desensitization can create a situation in which people are unable to contextualize their values...
i would also like to suggest that, some of these "disaffected" youth may actually be skeptical enough to see through the promises, lies, smoke and mirrors of the current/persistent socio-political quagmire in which we live...
perhaps their cynicism helps them contextualize current events in this Orwellian era of terrorism and tyranny.

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[info]willful_zephyr
2006-11-13 03:25 pm UTC (link)
You can never knife out the God of War - when you're standing over his body, you'll still find him guiding your hand. He'll live on in every violent act you create.

There are only two paths that can keep the God of War in check. One is total repudiation of violence, even to your own death. The other is... I don't know the words... acknowledgement and fear? The Heart of Darkness?

You cannot kill him, and some cannot turn away from violence, but you can use him (and let him use you back - goes both ways); and never let yourself forget what the God of War is. That is the hallmark of the "civilized" warrior - a respect for War, a love/hate relationship. You have to love it, in order to become good at it, to give it your passion.

Sigh, it is true a Heart of Darkness situation - stare into the abyss sort of thing.

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