Creating monsters - why?
Due to the reaction of one of our latest creations we decided to post an article on why we create monsters.
New TPub character (not yet revealed where he will feature)
It's a wonder to me why so many movies and novels are produced portraying demons, vampires, aliens and monsters of all kinds when the people who view or read them can be positively scared by these inventions. What is the fascination for us humans in scaring ourselves? Is life not troublesome enough that we have to add more fearful elements to it? We create these monsters and then we allow them to frighten us, and in some cases have power over us, also. Is this something we allow to spill over into our normal, everyday, lives; that we not only allow demons to have power over us, but also various humans to whom we give power by our adulation. Isn't it a fact that what we give our thought to we give power to also. This can vary in range from movie stars, pop stars, politicians, churchmen, to overseers and bosses. And, of course, monsters, the enemy, and demons! The fabric of our nightmares!
New TPub character (not yet revealed where he will feature)
Why Do We Create Monsters?
It's a wonder to me why so many movies and novels are produced portraying demons, vampires, aliens and monsters of all kinds when the people who view or read them can be positively scared by these inventions. What is the fascination for us humans in scaring ourselves? Is life not troublesome enough that we have to add more fearful elements to it? We create these monsters and then we allow them to frighten us, and in some cases have power over us, also. Is this something we allow to spill over into our normal, everyday, lives; that we not only allow demons to have power over us, but also various humans to whom we give power by our adulation. Isn't it a fact that what we give our thought to we give power to also. This can vary in range from movie stars, pop stars, politicians, churchmen, to overseers and bosses. And, of course, monsters, the enemy, and demons! The fabric of our nightmares!
Our nightmares and fears can range in status from the
simplistic, for example fear of a spider, to fear of people in our everyday
lives such as teachers, police, to greater fears of the unknown, the enemy we
cannot see and even wild animals we have never encountered! Fear of our own
failure is something probably all of us have faced at some time in our lives.
And many of us have as children been threatened with, and by, authority figures
to scare us into behaving ourselves. We have been threatened by our parents at
times with the police or the dreaded "bogyman", to frighten us into
behaving. Or were our parents afraid that their authority was in question and
they had to call on a weightier one
For one person to be placed in authority over another human
being does not always mean that the one in authority is better or more
intelligent than the minion below. In fact sometimes, and possibly more often
than not, it is not the case. But if the pupil does not eventually outshine the
teacher then the pupil has not really learned anything significant. And any
teacher who has had a pupil outshine them in their own field should be proud
that they have helped create this star.
But to be afraid of being either outshone by our pupils or
frightened by our own, or someone else's, demons, or cowed by those in
authority over us is something we should examine seriously and question. This
is not an anarchistic idea. It is simply, and I think intelligently and with due
respect, a re-defining of the relationships, dogmas and creations we have
allowed to take control of us. We are cautioned that we should not question
"our betters" or those in authority. Who are our betters?
I believe the wisest people are those who are the humblest
and would never assume to be better than anyone else and would never assume to
have control over us. My example would be known and established persons of
great and recognizable integrity. Two names spring instantly to mind: the
Mahatma Gandhi and Mother Theresa of Calcutta. These are people who have
cleared out the skeletons from their own cupboards and chased the demons from
their psyche, faced them, embraced them and turned fear on its head and changed
it into its opposite - love. And put themselves at the disposal of humanity to
help create a better world. People of this caliber would always be aware that
they are the ones learning the most from their fellow humans, and not the other
way around. They would also be people who see life as it is, without taboos,
class levels, dogmas and superstitions.
I often wonder where our superstitions came from in the
first place? Were they "invented" by people who recognized the fears
within us and used those fears to have control over us for their own selfish,
and mostly misguided, purposes? Someone who has your good at heart would never
use you in a manipulative way: would never impose an idea upon you that was not
for your own good. Once we accept these superstitions and take them on board,
we give the "inventor" of the superstition control over us. And if we
ourselves are the inventor then we give the superstition itself the control and
we have rendered ourselves a great disservice. One which will take a lot of
self work and probably much professional help to eradicate.
We haven't yet learned the lesson of "The Wizard Of
Oz". We have created our monsters and we allow them to lord over us. We
still see "Oz" as a children's story with a childish story-line and
comic-book characters with some memorable songs sprinkled around. The message
is lost on us. It was the little dog, with his non-thinking inquisitive, doggie
nose, that sniffed out the human manipulator behind the monster and exposed him
for what he really was; a sham. But still we seem to be fascinated by the
monsters and spooks. Our book stores are full of horror novels. Our film makers
earn big money from scaring us. The computer game stores are packed with aliens
and monsters to blast. All in the name of entertainment!
Neither have we learned from our past. Great civilizations
have risen and fallen. Wars have swept over our lands and been consigned to
history. Great men have lived and died. Economies have flourished and crashed.
All of these soar and plummet only to repeat the pattern again and again. If
history has taught us anything it is that we can be manipulated time and time
again. And we fall for the same "tricks" over and over. The majority
of us are gullible and the clever manipulators among us use it against us for
their own gain, at the same time telling us it's for our own good. And we
swallow it wholeheartedly. Will we ever learn?
Perhaps we are not aware of what we should learn. We study
at schools and collages the subjects that interest us, or what we think will
give us a good living. But is that all there is to it? An interest; a
livelihood. Do we ever stop to study ourselves. To really stop and look at what
we are. How we behave towards others. How we react to our friends,
acquaintances, relatives, bosses... Somebody reacts unfavorably to something we
said or did. Is the flaw in me or the beholder? Or I recognize a weakness in
another person and I use that weakness to manipulate them, and bring them down.
Do we see our own inhumanity to our fellow men? Should I not recognize that the
flaw is probably in myself and I need look for ways to correct in.
Are the demons we have created really the demonic side of
our own nature? Have we allowed ourselves to be afraid of that part of us? The
dark side of us: the negative aspect. Is it like saying we are afraid of our
own hand; that it might smite us. I believe the demons that scare us are mere
figments of our imagination which we seem to have little control over and
allowed to grow unchecked, sometimes to insane proportions. They are, I
believe, only the negative side of our duality. After all we have become what
we think we are and these are our own creations. Even if we took part in their
creation as part of the collective consciousness. And then we allowed them to
live within us. We nurtured them on our fears.
With a little effort we could just as easily banish then and
be rid of them, and like the unwanted weeds that choke the flowers in our
garden should be rooted out and consumed on the fire of our wisdom. But
perhaps, deep down, we are as attached to our dark side as we are to our
bright; attached to our hates as much as our loves; our dislikes as much as our
likes!
There is nothing to fear really except fear itself, the
voice of wisdom says. And that fear is the greatest demon of them all. That is
the foundation of all our problems. Topple it and the whole edifice of our
demons and the shadows of our doubts comes tumbling down.
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