June
2008 - Vol. 20
Birdman at Trafalgar
Square - London, by Don Schwager
.
Pigeons,
Chance, and the Purpose of Life
Defining
and shaping one’s purpose in life is not an easy task
(especially
if you happen to be a post-graduate cynic)
by
Sid O'Neil
Feeling strangely
adrift
The problem
with pigeons is at heart an ideological one. The life of a pigeon is short
and inglorious and undignified. A strict adherence to the threefold pillars
of life in the animal kingdom (eat, sleep and procreate) is enough for
most beasts, who often inadvertently attain a higher status in service
of Man. Cows are delicious when roasted. A donkey will pull a cart for
little more than the occasional carrot. Even foxes do their bit to keep
the rabbit population under control. But you cannot harness a pigeon, and
frankly they taste awful. The pigeon has a bad rep, because the spreading
of disease is prominent in their extremely limited skill-set. This is why
they are called “rats on wings”. The glassy-eyed vicious ignorance that
personifies them does little for their reputation, and the probable resultant
low self-esteem is possibly their largest character flaw. Surely, people
feed pigeons, but generally more from a sort of reluctant pity than anything
else. The pigeon ideology, therefore, is tarnished irreparably by their
social and functional disadvantages. What you do, after all, is generally
what defines you to the world.
These thoughts
were jogging through the gaping plateau that I call my mind as I sat in
the park in the late-spring sunshine this morning. I handed in my last
paper for University a few days ago, and ever since then I had been feeling
strangely adrift. Curse University as one might, the one thing it does
provide is a sense of purpose, however vague. That last paper signaled
the “end of an era”. Suddenly the rest of my life stretches in front of
me, like an unfurled roll of wallpaper – blank wallpaper. I stand with
a crayon, and the time has come to make the first marks on the paper, for
good or ill.
One’s Philosophy
of Life is a long-term purpose
At this time
of cosmic introspection I find my thoughts often drawn to a piece of wisdom
that my father laid on me a good many years ago. My father happens to be,
without question, the wisest man I know, and so it was exceedingly fortunate
that he ended up playing such a big part in my life. The gist of the thing
was: one of the things that defines a man is his Philosophy of Life. There
are many other things that make a man a man, some more esoteric than others,
but it seems to me that this particular one is especially important, be
you man or woman. I did not understand what he meant, at the time, and
I am not sure that I do now, entirely. “Philosophy of Life” is one of those
phrases, like “intellectual”, or “politically correct” that is hard to
pin down exactly.
Whereas university
(and the successful completion of your course) is a particular kind of
short-term purpose, perhaps it is that one’s Philosophy of Life is a long-term
purpose, in the sense that a purpose moves one to action, and dictates
one’s reaction to external stimuli. This is a difficult concept to grasp,
at first, but that suits the vague nature of the problem.
A definite white-knuckled
challenge
I had the
misfortune to be born both a cynic and an optimist. This has led to a huge
amount of grief and misunderstanding and nasty scenes over the years. It
is an awfully hard role to play with any kind of satisfaction. The temptation
is to avoid serious people and conversation and go with the prevailing
winds – but this has never been something I’ve been able to do. If not
for my parents, I would be the most disgusting kind of degenerate. But
they had the good fortune to discover Jesus, and... well, the rest is history.
Suffice it to say that I have always believed in God, and I have never
quite managed to get my upbringing out of my system. Which is, I suppose,
the point of an upbringing.
So it is that,
at the dawn of a new period in my life, I am starting to discover, to my
surprise, that a Philosophy of Life has been with me for a long while.
I have realised that, at the root of it all, my purpose is to get closer
to God. A few years ago, when I was a good deal less troubled by self-analysis
and deep ponderings, it was the easiest thing in the world to give my life
to God. I did not have much of a life to give, to be fair, and so the optimist
within gleefully placed the entire future in his hands. I never understood,
in those days, when people claimed it was difficult to give their lives
to him. Nowadays – nowadays it scares me to death. A future is a pretty
momentous and weighty thing to toss around, and to hand it off to someone
else is a definite white-knuckled challenge. Nevertheless, it is a simple
truth that there are no better hands to hold it. My parents knew this years
before I was born, and thank God for that.
Destiny and free
will
Which brings
us again, inevitably, to pigeons. Pigeons are born without any kind of
chance. Their destiny is pre-ordained. The truly astonishingly universe-shattering
thing about being a human being is that we have Free Will. We are not condemned
to a life of snatching at filthy crumbs in municipal parks, losing the
occasional eye to meaningless brawls with other pigeons. And the weird
paradox in this Free Will business is that the most freedom we can have
is by giving up our lives to God. It is unexplainable and counterintuitive.
Despite my upbringing, at any moment I can choose to reject God. Yet despite
the horrendously frightening wrench that it takes to give my life to him,
I continue to do so – because of the rare moments of extreme joy that it
brings, but most of all because this is my Philosophy of Life, and I know
without any doubt that it is completely right.
This is a weird
time. Every day is strange to me, and there is little about my life that
does not seem subject to sudden shifts and upheavals. There are big decisions
to be made – and now there is no one else to make them. The world is basically
rotten, and it is a hard place to shape a life. Despite this, the optimist
is on top. I will not be a pigeon, however attractive the bread crumbs
might seem at times. I don’t know what I will be – but I have high hopes,
and my God deals in legends and fulfilled dreams. Against my nature, I
can’t shake the feeling that it might just turn out OK in the end.
|
Sid O'Neill has just graduated
from Strathclyde University in Scotland. In recent years he has been actively
involved in
Community of the Risen
Christ in Glasgow and its outreach
to university age people. |
. |
. |
|