Maudslay Park CC Jean Stimmell: April 17, 2014 |
Through both image and word in yesterday’s blog, I tried to illuminate the following enigmatic quote by Elias Canetti:
“You carry the most important things
in you for forty or fifty years before you venture of articulate them. For this
very reason, you cannot reckon what it is lost with those people who die early.
All people die early.”
He appears to be saying that it is impossible to
articulate what is most important to us; worse yet, it takes us forty or fifty
years before we even try.
I think he has hit upon something important about our
existential inarticulateness, but, in my opinion, it is a consequence of living
in our modern world – it wasn’t always so.
I visualize our plight as an alternative vision to
Plato’s cave. In Plato’s version, humans lived in a cave but didn’t know it.
What they saw as reality was only a reflection on the cave walls of the real world outside in the sunlight.
In my Jungian version, our collective unconscious is
the real reality, tapping us into a
more-than-human wisdom, a reality that indigenous people are immersed in and consciously able to celebrate. But in our modern world of science and technology,
we no longer live in our bodies or within the sacred body of the Earth but in our minds.
Separated from our body, nature, and our sense of
place, Canetti is correct: we can’t fully articulate the important things, just
faintly perceive them as dream images and visions reflected on the flat-screen walls
of the cognitive and technological caves we have so blissfully built
around ourselves.
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