In
this day and age of many having an opportunity to be heard by a
reasonably large audience, many philosophies, prescriptions of
attitudes and such float on the world of web. Being fair to oneself
is one such idea that floats around on the web. It is seen as the
touchstone for all decisions in one's life. Perhaps, amongst those
with an undying concern for justice, the inclusion of the word 'fair'
gives it a slight edge over the other popular ideal of 'pursuit of
happiness'.
Being
fair to oneself has given birth to a progeny – of Abrahamic
proportions if I might add - of ideas with some leading ones being
'do what you love', 'walk away from exploitative relationships',
'enlightened self interest' etc. Apart from these positive ones, I
believe even the cynical statement, 'cannot rise up from one's class
interests' also has the same parent.
The
idea is assuming a hegemonic status today in the informed circles. It
would be interesting to ask the question, what is the alternative or
is there an opposing idea. There must be one because ideas can emerge
only in a context of multiplicity of ideas. So what is the other and
what is the basis of the other. I will make an attempt to put
together the other which can also be its exact opposite.
The
sailor who refuses to abandon a sinking ship until everyone else is
safely on the rescue boat and risks going down with the ship, the
wife in an abusive relationship choosing to risk her life in all
senses by staying in the relationship either by nurturing an
irrational optimism of transformation in the relationship or
believing that to be the demand on her on account of the commitment
entered into on a happy day years before, the person who suppresses
his voice out of concern about the impact his speech will have on
different members of the audience and beyond. These are people, who I
think, are challenging the 'being fair to oneself' idea.
To
be fair to the idea itself and its proponents, the idea probably has
many riders. There can be a moral boundary on what are one's
legitimate interests, one can argue that one's interest is actually
others' happiness and therefore, being fair to oneself would
necessarily include others' happiness. While that might indeed be
there, the practical usage of the idea has generally been about
protecting the person's life, property, dignity, happiness and right
to fair treatment.
There
is a fairly dramatic counter example to this. The following is the
description of the finest hour of Jesus Christ.At the age of 33,
Jesus was condemned to death. At the time
Crucifixion was the "worst" death. Only the worst criminals were condemned to be crucified. Each nail was 6 to 8 inches long. The nails were driven into his wrist. Not into his palms as is commonly portrayed. There's a tendon in the wrist that extends to the shoulder. The Roman guards knew that when the nails were being hammered into the wrist that tendon would tear and break, forcing Jesus to use his back muscles to support himself so that he could breath. Both of his feet were nailed together. Thus he was forced to support himself on the single nail that impaled his feet to the cross. Jesus could not support himself with his legs because of the pain so he was forced to alternate between arching his back then using his legs just to continue to breath. Jesus endured this reality for over 3 hours.
A few minutes before he died, Jesus stopped bleeding. He was simply pouring water from his wounds. From common images we see wounds to his hands and feet and even the spear wound to his side. But do we realize his wounds were actually made in his body. A hammer driving large nails through the wrist, the feet overlapped. And an even large nail hammered through the arches, then a
Roman guard piercing his side with a spear. But before the nails and the spear Jesus was whipped and beaten. The whipping was so severe that it tore the flesh from his body. The beating so horrific that his face was torn and his beard ripped from his face. The crown of thorns cut deeply into his scalp. Most men
Would not have survived this torture."He had no more blood to bleed out, only water poured from his wounds." The human adult body contains about 3.5 liters
(just less than a gallon) of blood. Jesus poured all 3.5 litres of his blood; He had three nails hammered into his Members; a crown of thorns on his head and, beyond that, a Roman soldier who stabbed a spear into his chest. All these without mentioning the humiliation he suffered after carrying his own cross for almost 2 kilometers, while the crowd spat in his face and threw stones (the cross was almost 30 kg of weight).
The
question that one should is ask is, why the sacrifice? He sacrificed
for redeeming humanity from the consequences of eternal death for
lives drenched in a sinful nature. He opened a path out of those
consequences and invited all to enter. What if we deny the whole need
for such a redemption by saying that the 'consequence' is merely a
figment of our imagination. In that case, can we have an ideal that
would logically demand similar sacrifices out of us? My guess is no.
If we remove that condition, we cannot really think of anything more
than 'being fair to oneself' and calibrated sacrifices. Not the total
sacrifice of the kind written above.
To
further accentuate the contrast, one can compare the finest hour of
Krishna in the Hindu mythology. The revelation to Arjuna at the end
of the Bhagvad Gita where Krishna is revealed as the all powerful,
all encompassing and omnipresent followed by his fulfilling the
purpose of his incarnation by destroying evil in the form of Kauravas
in the war in Kurukshetra. In the case of Krishna, the evil had a
person in the form of Kauravas which had to be destroyed. In the case
of Christ, evil did not have a personality and there was nothing to
be gained by destroying the Jews or Romans. The Jews and Romans went
about their lives undisturbed by the crucifixion and the
resurrection. There was simply no material impact for the sacrifice.
At least not for a few years. It is a different matter that today
our newspapers proclaim the 'event' when they use the Gregorian
calendar for dates.
There
are many who have taken that path towards a complete, total
sacrifice. Where they were unfair to themselves. Every missionary who
has ventured into the unknown and suffered the consequences, a Mother
Teresa who went out into the streets of Kolkata to take care of the
leper, the dying, Paul Brand who treated leprosy all his life and
made astounding contribution to understanding leprosy, a Gandhi who
stood spellbound by a statue of crucified Christ at the Sistine
Chapel and eschewed every protection other than that offered by God,
a Socrates who willingly drank the hemlock in service of his beloved
democracy. Closer home, my grandfather knelt in front of a knife
wielding, drunk attacker who had come to take the life of a friend of
his and said, 'take my life if you must.' They were not being fair to
themselves.
Now
that there are examples of individuals who lived a life that was the
opposite of 'being fair to oneself', let us see what the left liberal
calls these people and their sacrifice. “Professor Thapar’s
public intellectual is not a Socratic or Christ-like gadfly with a
raging death drive, but is embodied in the figure of the Buddha.”
(http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-opinion/the-rise-of-the-liberalright-intellectual/article6926683.ece).
There is no glory in sacrifice. It is merely a 'raging death drive'
for some. I would think that these are also the purveyors of 'being
fair to oneself' as an idea. For they have effectively destroyed the
foundational premise of 'glory in sacrifice'. There is no eternity,
it is only the life on earth. There are no seraphs inviting you to be
in their midst and glorify God, it is only a figment of imagination.
There is no metaphysics, it is only a dead branch of philosophy.
There is nothing before the beginning of time, nothing has no
observational consequences
(http://www.hawking.org.uk/the-beginning-of-time.html).
I also suspect that there is the assumption of 'no natural limits'
that underpins the 'being fair to oneself' idea. If life had zero sum
games, then being fair to oneself might actually entail stepping on
someone else's toes. But this assumption is not a necessary one.
It
is important that we are extremely guarded when we proclaim the
virtues of sacrifices. A simple test would suffice. Gandhi has given
us that test. "Joy comes not out of infliction of pain on others but out of pain voluntarily borne by oneself." If you are asking another person to sacrifice, be warned that you are not glorifying sacrifice but denigrating sacrifice. If you are asking yourself to sacrifice, you are indeed glorifying sacrifice. But then there will be moments where others seek your advice on whether to sacrifice or not. Answer cautiously, with prayer, with faith. And do keep in mind the fate of the holiest of all petitioners.
This is something I dedicate to a friend who has stood by me through my highs and lows, who has challenged me, who has comforted me and importantly listened to me. While I do dedicate this to her, it is by no means to be seen as suggesting her concurrence with these views. But this is for her.