Saturday, November 22, 2008
The Search for Self
Recently, I remarked to myself that the quest to find one's "Self" is and endless and often aimless endeavor. A person is defined by their actions and inactivity: The books you've read, the places you've gone, and people you met. In contrast, classes you've skipped, appointments ignored, and friends long forgotten are still building blocks in the great concept of "Self." In other words, in your quest to find yourself, you will eventually only find what you already knew. But why do people seek to find their "Self?" Is it because they don't understand the aforementioned truth? Or is it that they have an underlying need to remind their self where they came from. Nostalgia can be a powerful thing. Perhaps people seek to find a more ideal "Self." If you look for something that does not exist long enough, will it exist? Perhaps in your search for a better you, you might gain some knowledge from looking back over your past. Hindsight is 20/20. But suppose we are looking for a new "Self" because of a dark past, looking back at it might only aggravate the already pessimistic image we have of ourselves. So we look out and around, scouring the world for a person or culture to emulate. Then that we be our new "Self." But we never are a different person, we simply buried the less desirable traits beneath guilt, revelation, innovation, and old bedtime stories. I believe that to find ourselves, we need to see ourselves as an impartial observer. Only then would we be able to see past the backdrops that our egos or fears drop in front of us.
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2 comments:
I disagree with your truth. I believe that although we are defined by what we've done, but that the "Self" which we all search for is merely the Why. We wonder why we do the things we do, what motivates us to do those things, and that the "Self" which we wish to create is to find a new motivation that will create an alternate pattern of behavior, another course of actions that will define us in the eyes of others. Although I do agree that we often cover up our less-desirable traits, I also think that it is only a temporary patch that we hold onto, hoping that it will develop into a new sense of self. It is a bandage hiding a wound until we have the chance to heal it, often leaving a scar.
I border on agreeing with you and agreeing with Squirrel. I've been looking for my "self" for a while and have come to understand me a lot better. I've also come to realize that the self I used to be and the self I want to be are two different things. So yes, I reach out for something more. But not to hide from the self I was, but to embrace the self I could become.
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