Let me start with paradox. The Online Etymology Dictionary tells us that the word comes from the
Greek and is made up of para- meaning
“contrary” and doxa meaning “opinion”;
The OED then provides a meaning which seems to have been framed in the 1560s.
It is a “statement that is seemingly
self-contradictory yet not illogical or obviously untrue.”
I apply that word in
adjectival form to detachment. Appropriately, I believe. When we detach, we
detach from something. In an ordinary
situation, we get exercised about something ridiculous in the news. Our mind is
so on-and-on-and-on about it that, finally, we say: “I’ve got to get detached
from this.” One of the paradoxes of detachment, for me, anyway, is that taking
up my diary and then meticulously recording the irritation, in every
conceivable form, sooner or later (usually after writing about three-quarters
of a page), the emotional turmoil has diminished. The attachment to my
description of it has caused a distance to develop. And from the distance the whole
thing has lost its hold on me. And this is so even if the ultimate pain comes
from a source we can rarely shake, e.g. noting that I owe a huge sum of money
for something I was unaware of and, having examined the circumstances, I see
that I’ll have to pay it. Detachment eventually comes when I shrug, at last,
and think to myself: “It’s only money.” This though indicates that I’ve reached
a point of awareness in which I’ve managed to detach even from the value of
money. It won’t last, of course, but for a meaningfully sufficient moment I’ve
achieved freedom.
The paradox is that
genuine detachment means the embrace of nothingness. That statement is
seemingly self-contradictory; but the way it feels is both logical and
obviously true.” Another name for it might be religion (another paradoxical word).
I say that because,
in a really meaningful way, especially in a time like our own which is utterly
attached to sensory reality and its extensions into abstractions like money, a
time eventually comes when the world’s madness has reached what seem like
maxima; life seems to have lost all value and meaning; everything is going into
the bottomless pit. At such a time, in a seemingly self-contradictory way,
parts of humanity embrace belief in the unbelievable, a reality beyond the one
available for examination. They form or join religions. In effect they detach
from the madness all around. And, paradoxically, the continued practice of this
detachment creates a reality in which, if you have social patience enough, life
resumes again. And the madness then seems to have passed.
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