The Road Less Traveled


Guilt and shame are two of the primary tools that we use to control
each other. Think of the last time you had a conflict with another person.
How much of the conflict arose from the fact that they were trying to either
assert control over you, guilt you into doing something or shame you because
of who you were?

I read a book in April, The Road Less Traveled, and it made it crystal
clear the way guilt, shame and control factor into our day to day lives.

Apparently, last April was when I was suppose to read it because within
6 days of each other I lost my job and my roommate read me the riot act,
so I decided that it was time to move. The job situation, I anticipated and
already had begun to make moves to transition to another gig. The roommate
situation caught me off guard, and came across as a clear desire to assert
control over me, when it appeared that was I vulnerable and without
options. Clearly, that was a bad move on her end.

In the midst of all these life changes I was reading “The Road Less Traveled”.

The book is incredible for three reasons. First it sets forth the nature of control
and how human beings would rather control others than control themselves.

Second, it sets forth a definition of love as “the willingnesses to extend yourself
for the spiritual growth of another”.

Thirdly, it talks about what it means to love each other and to love children.

I am always fascinated when I hear people talk about how they arn’t going
to spoil their kids. It is easier said then done. When you are tired,
and they are whining or crying and giving them that new bratz doll or video
game will bring you a moment of peace, it is easy to see how we get on the road to
spoiledville. Dr. Peck addresses the issue of love and discipline when he
writes,

Love is not simply giving, it is judicious giving and judicious withholding as well. It is judicious praising, judicious criticizing. It is judicious arguing, struggling, confronting, urging, pushing and pulling in addition to comforting. It is leadership. The word judicious means requiring judgment, and judgment requires more than instinct. It requires thoughtful and often painful decisionmaking.

Once we recognize that life is a series of problems to be solved then we
are in the position to make things happen. Dr. Peck addresses this issue
when he writes,

Life is difficult….Most do not fully see this truth that life is difficult. Instead they moan…Life is a series of problems. Do we want to moan or do we want to solve them. Do we want to teach our children to solve them?

…Discipline is the basic set of tools we require to solve life’s problems. It will be come clear that these tools are techniques of suffering, means by which we experience the pain of problems in such a way as to work them through and solve them successfully, learning and growing in the process. When we teach ourselves and our children discipline, we are teaching them and ourselves how to suffer and also how to grow.

Discipline and self examination go hand in hand. The cialis india recommended dosage are 100mg, should be taken before 30 min when you plan to have sex with a doctor and get rid of ED so that you enjoy a healthy sex life. It’s important that person taking this medication stay in touch with doctor and keep informing order discount viagra about each and every medicine are available from an online pharmacy store. Kamagra is a little blue oral medication that has been clinically tested and proven to improve erectile dysfunction so that men levitra 100mg can enjoy happy sexual health. But most of them are loaded with heavy chemicals that cialis professional australia cause severe side-effects. One of the reasons
why I have the courage to criticize hip hop, is because
I have found the courage to criticize myself. It isn’t easy. No one wants
to have their personal contradictions staring them in the face. It makes you
feel like an idiot. However, I know that life for me, is always, changing
and moving, and I rarely have the same problem twice. Dr. Peck talks about the
importance of self examination when he writes,

Examination of the world without is never as personally painful as the world within and it is certainly because the pain involved in a life of genuine self examination that the majority steer away from it. Yet when one is dedicated to the truth this pain seems relatively unimportant- and less and less important (and therefore less painful) the farther one proceeds down the path of self examination.

I often write about hip hop and the problem with our passive acceptance of the
messages we get from Hip Hop and the media at large. I was reminded
of this in Dr. Peck’s chapter on love. In the following paragraph, he discuses
the way that passive dependence can impact a persons life. He writes,

Passive dependent people lack self discipline. They are unwilling or
unable to delay gratification of their hunger for attention. In their
desperation to form and preserve attachments they throw honesty
to the winds. They cling to outworn relationships when they should
give them up. Most important, they lack a sense of responsibility for
themselves.They passively look to others, frequently to their own
children, as the source of their happiness and fulfillment, and therefore
when they are not happy or fulfilled they basically feel that others are
responsible.

I started this post off talking about guilt and shame. Last night, I was reminded
of both guilt and shame and of how children are socialized to treat each other.
We say that “kids are mean”, but in reality they aren’t. They are taught at a young
age that to make yourself feel better you have to pounce verbally or physically
on someone else.

I watch people. I watch the little things that they do that indicate a desire
to control the situation they are in. The desire to control others runs deep.
Birkhold said something amazing to me yesterday about control that
I haven’t quite been able to shake. He said that one of the
reasons that I feel the way that I do is because I am more vulnerable than
I am in control and that this is a sign of being a healthy human being.
I, of course don’t like it. I feel like I am standing at the edge of a cliff, looking
over it.

However, I know that being around people who like to control me and others
feels like a hazing ritual so it is affirming to know that while it is uncomfortable
at the moment, that the discipline and the ability to sit with the suffering is
being cultivated.

When was the last time someone tried to assert control over you?

How did you handle it?

Do you see yourself as a “control freak”? If yes, how do you
reconcile your desire to control others with the avoidance
of
wanted to control yourself?