|
Share the article on
this page with a friend.
Click
here.
|
|

The Gospel
of Self Help
By Richard Eyre
Publishers
note: Perhaps the three most pursued and coveted things
in our modern world are control, ownership, and
independence. In Richard Eyre's mind, they are
the three deceiver's — and are ultimately both unobtainable
and undesirable. They are, Eyre believes, the "false
gods" that separate us from God and rob us of the things
of the spirit. This column, exploring the obsessions we
have developed with control, ownership and independence,
and outlining a better and more spiritual alternative for
each, will open you to a new world of thinking that may
change how you live.
Thanks for the Feedback
First
of all, thanks for all of your responses to last week's
opening column. Apparently, the concept of these three subtle
deceivers who alter the way we think and lead us in non-spiritual
directions, has struck a chord in many of you, and caused
you both to think and to worry (just as they do me!).
Something deep inside each
of us recognizes control, ownership, and independence for
what they are — robbers of our peace and separators
of us from God. I will share some of the feedback and comments
I am getting from you in a future column, so keep your e
mails coming.
Many of you also asked, begged
in some cases, and demanded in a few, that I reveal the
three alternatives, the three attitudes or concepts that
can be substituted for the three produce the opposite effects.
And the answer is no, not yet! But I promise they will come,
and that, when they do, you will recognize them as truth.
But I don't believe they will be fully meaningful to you,
or fully useful, until you are completely convinced that
control, ownership, and independence are dangerous and deceitful
concepts that lead us in directions we don't want to go.
Many readers are a long way
from being convinced of that, because much of their lives
have been devoted to the pursuit of these three things,
and no one wants to admit that they have been aiming in
wrong directions. So stay with me through the "negative"
part of this series (how the three deceivers harm us and
why they are both wrong and false) so that the "positive"
part, when it comes, the three alternative attitudes or
paradigms I want to suggest, will be fully meaningful.
The Gospel of Self
Help
I wrote last week about the
possibility that our obsessions with the misguided and overextended
concepts of Ownership, Control and Independence are ruining
the quality of our lives. And the column suggested that
these three pursuits and paradigms have become our idols
— to the point that they are the assumed and implied
goals of our whole society (and of the whole culture of
"self help" that has grown up within our society.)
This column has some big ambitions,
not only because it will argue against both the legitimacy
and the benefits of these three concepts, but also because
it will try to take on this whole world of “self help”
? with its underlying assumptions that control, ownership
and independence should be our goals.
What I am going to try to do
here is to create something of a revolution against the
entrenched idea that they are the things that we all should
be seeking. Although my writing and language may not sound
revolutionary or look incendiary, the fact is that these
columns will challenge the traditional, mainstream ideas
of self help as directly and as diametrically as the Colonists
took on the British, or the round-worlders took on the flatlanders,
or the impressionist painters took on the realists, or the
Protestants took on the Catholics.
Without passing judgment on
any of the above, the point is that they each happened because
some people deeply believed there was a need for a paradigm
shift — that the current reality, or belief, or “norm”
was wrong and needed correction — needed reversing.
I believe, passionately, that some serious correction and
reversing are needed in the field of goal-setting and self
help. I think that the three objectives that most self help
writers and gurus assume, (and that they try to help us
get to) are the wrong goals, and that we undermine our happiness
and our peace by subscribing to them and searching for them.
What do I mean by “self help”? And why does
it matter? Well, go into a big bookstore and notice that
the second largest section (next to fiction) is labeled
“self help” or “self improvement.”
In a way, self help has become the fastest growing religion
in this country when measured by book sales, or by speaking
fees, or by what people are talking about when they wax
serious or philosophical.
The label sounds great. Self improvement — what could
be better than a person trying to improve himself, trying
to become better, to find fulfillment and happiness? It’s
not the subject of self help that I’m against. There
are great self help books, based on consistently true principles
(Stephen Covey’s 7 Habits comes to mind). I like books
on work/family balance, and on self education. Benjamin
Franklin’s Autobiography was probably the first American
book in the self improvement genre, and how can you be against
that?
What I am against — and what I want to fight, are
the three predominant themes or objectives that permeate
and dominate current self help books and ideas. I know what
these most common themes are because I recently spent the
best part of a day inventorying, by subject, the literally
hundreds of books in the self improvement section of a super-sized
Barnes and Noble.
As I mentioned, the most prominent themes (or objectives)
of current self help literature, directly stated or implied,
are these:
-
-
-
You don’t
have to go to the bookstore to verify this; just think about
it for a minute. We have:
-
books on gaining
control — of your time, your relationships,
your body, your boss, your employees, your moods, your
circumstances, your image, your whole life and everything
in it;
-
books on ownership
— of wealth, of toys, of whatever money can buy
and on how to have more of everything, and
-
books on becoming
more independent — financially, emotionally,
mentally, and on how to be and do anything you want without
help from or reliance on anyone else.
So what’s
wrong with these three themes? Simply this: They get carried
to their extremes and become direct causes of stress and unhappiness.
Think about the folly of trying to control everything. Life
is essentially unpredictable. It happens. Little of it is
within our control, and the measure of our success and of
our happiness is not how much we control of what happens but
how we handle and respond to what does happen. Constantly
trying to control what can’t be controlled is a recipe
for stress.
Think about the obsession with ownership. What do we really
own? We pass through this life and we may obtain deeds and
titles, but does anything really belong to us? And doesn’t
the illusion of ownership cause jealousy and envy and condescension
and lots of other emotions that connect to unhappiness?
Think about the misplaced desire for independence. We are
all interconnected and interdependent in so many ways. We
need each other and it is these needs that make us human and
that allow us to love and that encourage us to make commitments.
Too much emphasis on independence leads to isolation. And
we are all completely dependent, even for our very breath,
on God.
The bottom line is that we can’t really have any of
the three, and wouldn’t want them even if we could.
Too much control would take the adventure and spontaneity
out of life. Too much ownership becomes bondage. And too much
independence equals loneliness.
Replacing that Gospel
with the Gospel
Now, again, before I drive
any of you libertarians or capitalists or time managers
completely crazy let me repeat something I said last week:
Ownership and Independence and Control are important and
useful political and economic concepts ? essential to our
democracy and our free market actually (click here
to go back and read that first column).
But I believe we have taken
them far beyond that, and made them our personal and spiritual
goals as well. They have become the conscious and subconscious
targets of our lives. They have grown into the framework
and the parameters of how we think and of what we want to
be, and they affect far too much the way we live.
There is a certain linkage
between the three deceivers, because they feed on each other,
and each of the three fosters and encourages the other two.
They are all materialistic instincts that can cause us to
isolate ourselves and to judge others. They are secular
instincts that do not allow for the influence, the guidance,
and the ownership of God. Essentially, they are all self
help ideas, suggesting that we rely on ourselves, belong
to ourselves, and create ourselves.
Indeed, that is the trouble
with most self help literature or ideas ? the suggestion
of the ultimate impossibility of lifting ourselves by our
own bootstraps and ignoring our dependency on God who owns
us, controls the plan He created for us, and answers our
prayers according to His wisdom, not ours.
Built-In Immunity?
Of all the peoples of the world,
those of us with access and allegiance to the Restored Gospel
should be most immune to the influence and deception of
the three deceivers. But are we? Are Mormons less materialistic
and pretentious and style-conscious than others? Are we
more willing to turn over the control of our lives to God
than other believers? Are we more accepting of God's will
and more dependent on His guidance? I'm not answering those
questions; I'm just asking them, and perhaps we all need
to think about them.
How much do the idols of Control,
Ownership and Independence have their hooks into you?
What do we pursue in their
place? Are there alternative goals or ways to look at the
world that are more worthy of our desire and more aligned
with true happiness and peace? Of course there are, and
the Gospel teaches them to us every day that we will look,
and listen, and learn.
And I believe that there is
a direct alternative for each of the three deceivers, three
opposite attitudes that can be named and adopted and prayed
for, that will produce the opposite results of the concepts
they replace — peace instead of stress, cooperation
instead of competition, teamwork instead of tension —
but I am going to hold off a little longer on all of that,
and try to keep your attention for the next few weeks on
the damage that our subconscious obsessions with Control,
Ownership and Independence are doing to us.
If I can convince you not only
that these are the wrong things to pursue, but that you
must fight them and replace them, I will have a better chance
of winning you over to a full commitment to their alternatives.
See you here next Friday and
next weekend.
Richard welcomes your feedback
and inputs. Write to him at Richard@meridianmagazine.com.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|
|
| About
the Author: |
|

A former Mission
President in London and candidate for Utah governor, Richard was
the director of the White House Conference on Parents and Children
for President Reagan. He served on the President's advisory panel
for secondary and higher education. A graduate of the Harvard Business
School, he headed a management consulting company for 20 years before
giving it up to meet the growing demands of his writing and speaking
schedule.
Richard and
his wife Linda are parents of nine children and authors of a dozen
bestselling family and parenting books. They are now focusing on
the phase they are entering: Empty Nest Parenting. Through their
web sites valuesparenting.com
and familynightlessons.com,
their frequent national media appearances and theirspeaking and
lecture tours (see http://www.theeyres.com/),
they continue to work at their mission statement which is, "FORTIFY
FAMILIES, popularize parenting, bolster balance, and validate values."
|
| Related
Articles: |
| The Three Deceivers
Archive |
| What
do you think? |
| Share
your thoughts, comments, and impressions about this article. |
Format
for Print
Click Here |
Share
the article on this page with a friend.
Click
here. |
|
|