by mystic » Sun Oct 07, 2012 12:49 am
Practicing perfection... I admit that I have always been trying to keep consistent with God and myself. But I see that for many people it is just a too heavy burden. People want to live a simple and easy life, without problems/complications. Why do we need to life in an eternal fight? Going for perfection just means that fight, against our shortcomings, against the problems that we find in life, against anything.
In the west, this point of view maybe has led to current short-term commitment in marriages. People see somebody who had an accident on the road... and just think: "Somebody will stop". And they go away. Or, if they stop, it is usually just for curiosity, and not to help. It is not a rule, but it is often this way.
Then, there is a small category of people who still believe in old values, but they know that they have to be extra careful in life, because most people out there do not think as they do. So, in the west there are always less marriages. It surprised me this year to hear in the news in Italy, the center of Catholicism, that the number of unmarried couples living together surpassed the number of married couples. So, since divorce was only allowed in my previous generation, this means that most married couples now are the old people. Young people almost in their entirety do not marry.
In my generation, I have only a couple of friends who married. All the others... are still single. And I have many friends who are in their 50's too...
So, practicing perfection can really make you a certified single. It can make you also alienated from the community, because they see you picky and perfectionist. Here they use this term as a bad word. To me, the people use the word "jurassic", to describe my old way of thinking.
To make a further example of western countries, how the concept of perfection became just an aleatory added value to goods, I will mention that most new generations do not care to improve, to learn new things, to care for their life. They live in the illusion that they go out to buy something that they need, and it is just given to them, without effort. When it breaks, they just throw it away and buy a new one. And the same logic is used in dating. They do not even study for their career, except the minimum required to get the piece of paper. Ask them to change a lamp, to substitute an electrical cable... they don't know how to do it. They cannot fix things. If somebody needs to fix a shirt, or an umbrella, there will be nobody in the house who can do it. But even worse... if they go to find a shop that can do it... they will find no shop. They closed them all. People prefer to buy a thing anew rather than fix it.
I like sometimes to fix some electronics, and many times I went to the shops that sell electronic components. I went even to the largest supply chains in my region, just to find a very silly thing: enameled copper wire. Result: nobody has it. They all say that they used to have it 10 years ago, but now there is nobody distributing it any longer. I ask them: "So, how will I connect the components inside my kit?" Answer: "I don't know".
Of course, it is not so everywhere. I think that Germany is better than Italy. Maybe I am exaggerating too, but I'm just saying about a common trend in the west. In Italy, where I live, it is so. Nobody cares to perfect things. When I am looking for something, I search the internet to buy it in China directly. And so there are many westerns in sites like this who come here to find a wife in the Philippines. It's all connected.
Indeed, examining the attitude of a person toward perfection is a very good way to assess how he/she is in life, and if he/she will be a committed person, whose word stands where he/she puts it. You can also see if that person likes to improve, fix things, what he/she is building in his/her life. I hope I didn't make a heavy post on the subject. I will love to hear from everybody what they think about the concept of perfection being related to consumerism vs perfection as something that needs to be cultivated in western countries.
"The real opposite of love is not hate, but indifference" (Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz)