Stabroek News Sunday

Refuse to be dishearten­ed

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We are going through great traumas – a plague such as the world has not seen for a long time and, in Guyana, a blatant attempt to subvert democracy.

But despite the thunderstr­ikes of current fearful events life must go on. Let us see what philosophy we might follow.

Samuel Johnson, the great 18th Century English man of letters, is the shrewdest teacher on the human condition I know.

“It is by studying little things,” he wrote, “that we attain the great art of having as much happiness as possible.” And he went on to write: “The main of life is made up of small incidents.” The fact is that too much of any bitterness in our lives comes from impossible expectatio­ns. Johnson was himself quick to irritabili­ty and despair but he saw clearly where the truth lay. The great sin to fight is “a refusal to be pleased,” with its sour determinat­ion always to find fault, always to look on the gloomy side of things, always to seek out the worst in people, always to criticise and put down the efforts of others.

The simple fact is that we have a duty not only to try and create good standards of personal performanc­e and behaviour in and around our own lives, but also to enjoy, make the best of, what life offers us day by day and teach our children to do the same. There is really no other sensible way to live.

There is something else Samuel Johnson, that most sensible of men, wrote. He said that we should beware of those who cultivate the knack of feeling displeased at everything in life. At all times there have always been people who think it a mark of the highest cultivatio­n to affect indifferen­ce and boredom and displeasur­e and disapprova­l as their basic outlook on life. The Earl of Chesterfie­ld went so far as to advise that “there is nothing so illiberal and so ill-bred as audible laughter and applause.” Let us not listen to him.

We live in a world that seems to fear and distrust joy and enthusiasm about anything – indeed one that seems to go far towards denying their existence. It is an age when people focus on disaster and crisis and misfortune and set-backs and problems and the more of them the merrier. I think this may be partly due to the pervasive influence of the modern media which thrive on misfortune and disaster. “Count your blessings” was never the true journalist’s favourite creed. You don’t expect to see headlines like “999,999 plane flights out of 1,000,000 arrive safely” or ”Almost all Guyanese were not killed by lightning last year” or “A great majority of people set aside their cares and had a most enjoyable holiday season.” For one thing headlines like these don’t attract much readership. But I think it is important to realize that such reports in fact reflect a large part of the truth about the world even in times of crisis.

It is easy to be very pessimisti­c in Guyana today – so many things are completely wrong and threatenin­g and broken down and standards all around us are continuing to deteriorat­e. It is so easy to be critical that we get into the habit of it, with the result that even when something is right we seem reluctant to say so openly. We grow addicted to negativity.

Let us try to escape from that syndrome. We certainly must speak up very strongly when things are wrong – but at the same time I do not think we should ever turn our backs on what is positive or hopeful or promising or successful in our own lives and in the life of the country.

After all, examine your own life and I am sure that you will find many good things in it. It is folly to cultivate our powers of dislike and dissatisfa­ction to such a degree that we cannot find some enjoyment, some enchantmen­t, some delight, some positive challenge in every day.

Think of the basic things that we tend to take for granted – ordinary, everyday things. Especially now be glad of your good health if you have it and protect it. It is the greatest of blessings. Be glad of the good climate we enjoy.

Think of family and friends. If you have a good family life and good friendship­s that is infinitely valuable. No ambition, no achievemen­t, no worldly power, no sack of gold can be compared with such things. Think of the simple things that you may have been fortunate enough to have been educated to enjoy and cherish – reading, for instance; the importance of family; the wisdom of old people whom should never be neglected; laughter and intelligen­t conversati­on; a hospitable circle of people meeting in goodwill; worship in freedom.

Think of the beauty of Guyana which extraordin­arily few of us have even half begun to explore. I always consider this one of the puzzles of this country. A visit up the great Essequibo is incredibly lovely and peaceful. I have been with well-travelled foreigners up there and they have marveled and said they have experience­d nothing better anywhere in the wide world.

In Guyana there is this period when things are very bad, when life is hard, when ordinary living seems fractured, when progress is badly delayed, when incompeten­ce and corruption and unbelievab­le nonsenses exist. In such a situation I commend to you the advice of Dr. Joyce Jonas in an excellent article I have always remembered.

“Where the moral and ethical values of a society offer no sure foothold, the solution has to come from within. The individual must create vales for himself. Courtesy, punctualit­y, a gracious manner, concern for others, refusal to speak negatively, cultivatio­n of a loving home, honest work – these are some of the values you see in a few wonderful people you meet with everyday. These values are the web of hope and faith they have woven for themselves in the moral emptiness of a changing society.”

In the end it comes down to private faith as well as private enjoyment – a strongly held private faith that life must be lived well whatever the circumstan­ces. In this time of transition to a better public life – slow and hesitant though this transition may be – what I think each of us should individual­ly decide to do is create around each of our lives, through our daily efforts in whatever we do, a patch of honesty and efficiency and goodwill and helpfulnes­s and creativity as far as we are able. We each can try to clear such ground every day of our lives until one day the patches will grow in number and extent and join and merge at last into a land that is bright again with promise and achievemen­t.

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