“To secure one’s own happiness is a duty,” are about the
only words I remember liking from Emmanuel Kant’s Groundings for the
Metaphysics of Morals.
Skimming through the furiously highlighted copy I’ve saved
from my first philosophy class, I am trying to remember what it was that rubbed
me so far the wrong way about Kant. I think that it was, probably, all the talk
of duty and law. At least, that is my gut reaction when I hold the thin volume between my thumb and forefinger, like I do a horn worm in the tomato patch.
It seems that I have long taken issue with authority, with
any attempt for an outside force to dictate my moral compass or how to be in
the world. Granted, there is a great deal of Kant that takes the golden rule
and transposes it onto society—and I’m completely on board with that and wish
mightily and try a little to live more kindly and treat the world more as I
would like to be treated—but he has a preachy tone of what one “should” do that
just sets unsettles my stomach and clenches my fists.
And yet, lately, as I weigh and balance the choices I am
making in how I live, the steps I take as steps themselves and as steps along a
path towards something always better and kinder and cleaner, I have been
thinking of Kant and securing one’s own happiness as an ultimate duty.
My friend and fellow rabble-writer, Laura, posted a sweet response to the previous Granite Bunny ramble. I think her words are brilliant,
and made me see so sharply how all of our lives are built out of our choices
and priorities. She’d love to farm, but does not, in part, because of her rich
community in the city and moral stance against cars. And so, she does paid work
that doesn’t satisfy, yet leads a life that is rich in different ways than my
own. She is jealous of my farm work, I am jealous of her centralized and rooted
community—my glorious people are scattered like a wonderful and expansive
constellation but I never have quorum of my dearest ones all in one place, and
I wander a lot looking for the right fit—geographically, socially,
personally—to root and grow with.
The grass isn’t greener on the other side of anything—it’s
all green, all the time. And it is important to remember that, I think. That
the choices of your life are because of the loves and quests and answers you’ve
currently got.
For example, my need to put hands in dirt and body in
service to something tangibly greater than myself so that my heart and brains
and fingers can pound out these words to offer what I can to the world trumps
all other priorities at present. There have been times when I have needed to
wrap myself up in the people I love above all other needs, and times when I have
shunted myself as far off a grid as I could find. Like all things, these
choices and balances will shift, and I am coming to expect changes and not try
to anticipate what they will be. I do not know where I will be one year from
today, what adventure the priorities of my heart will have sent me on. To me, today at least, this is more exciting than frightening.
To be poetic, I say these things are matters of my heart, my
soul, my moral compass. However, it is my graceless stomach that is the real ethical
barometer. There is a certain feeling of unbalance and sickness when I am doing
the wrong thing, my wrong thing, when I cannot put my daily actions in context
of my deep beliefs of how to be in and a part of the world. When I “secure my
own happiness,” as Kant would say, my stomach is calm. When I am off my course,
I feel it deeply, physically. In this way, I don’t always feel like I make my own choices,
so much as my choices make me. If I made my own choices, if the compass of my
guts didn’t drive me, there are a host of things I would likely have done
differently. If I didn’t listen and adhere as carefully to my guts, chances are
my life would be more secure and predictable and perhaps less overwhelming. I
can hope that I would be happy with that, but there seems to be something I
inescapably love about being kitty-corner to whatever normal milestones and
benchmarks are for our society.
I don’t think I could be me if I did anything other than
obey my moral compass and choices of my heart, soul, and stomach.
And so, I follow my instincts, because at all costs, the
priceless joy and satisfaction is worth the struggle, and the worry and pain I
may—with extreme regret—cause anyone else. It is worth my own dark times, bouts of loneliness, sleepless nights
and scrounging months. And, I know the smack of selfishness that rings
through this—if anyone other than my dog were dependent on me, my life would need to be different. But sustaining anyone that close would have become the right thing for my love
and energies, I suspect.
My dear friend Shannon advised me recently to “treat
everyone as if they have Asperger’s, and a broken heart.” As a somewhat tactless
person with bleeding hearts pinned all over my sleeves, I do love this—it helps
to swath interactions with a gentleness that is often lost and always needed.
Too, I would add to assume that everyone is doing the best they can by whatever
compass their morals abide by, that they are making choices, and being made by
choices, in ways which make intricate sense to their soul, but perhaps not to
the outside world.
I recognize that my efforts at farming—where I drive about
an hour a day, alone, time which could be spent nurturing relationships
closer—run afoul of my desire to rid the world of the scourge of fossil fuel
dependence. I am not trying to justify or balance this: 120 CSA members at the
farm times X pounds of carbon kept out of the atmosphere due to people shopping
local and organic divided by 5 hours of driving plus 37 kinds of sunlight on
1,038.2 shades of green in the fields…there is no equation. Joy does not
compute.
What I am doing, though, for now, is reminding me that I am
an active part of something greater than myself. There are so many ways to do
this. I believe it is the sweetest duty and happiness one can attain, however
the effort manifests itself in your own life. As long as my daily life can be
placed in context of, in compliment to, the demands of my soul, I think that
happiness is present. I will likely not farm forever, but I will forever seek
this sense of being in and of and engaged with the world. This is the happiness
that is my duty to secure. And I am happier still to share it.
I read your entire post. Well- written and thoughtful, so I shared it on FB.
ReplyDeleteThank you!
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