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Therefore "I am"


The Search for Meaning & Finding our Purpose

Historically, Europeans have sought to dominate and suppress nature. This point of view has a concomitant bias against natural inclinations within the human personality. Rejecting parts of the self has led Europeans, in particular, to su er from a form of cultural disorientation. This creates confusion about one’s inner nature and expression, conflict about who one is and how one fits into the world.

One of the results of this spiritual gap is the personal development industry which attempts to fill this spiritual void; or bridge the gap between what we are and how we feel about ourselves. It is not necessarily doomed to fail just so o en misleading. As the spiritual sickness has a solution only found in nature and in acts that ground and deepen one’s roots.

Carl Jung’s concept of individuation is helpful to broadly define the goal of personal development; the drive to achieve wholeness and balance. In Jungian psychology, one could understand individuation as “knowing yourself.”

What makes a person unique and identifiable as separate from another person is this process of individuation. Through undergoing experiences, a person’s innate qualities and unconscious psyche are gradually integrated over a lifetime into a healthy and whole self. Having seen many people yearn for personal transformation; it is important to recognize that no two people are alike. They may look alike but spiritually be on a completely di erent page. Each path represents different phases of learning and growing.

In the West, people come from a place of not being whole and complete. Whereas in traditional cultures there was a deep cultural understanding that we are born whole and complete and nothing can separate us from this truth. Individuation naturally unfolds when a culture is in harmony with its environment. The Western opposition to its environment and enmity toward outsiders creates a disharmony, a spiritual gap and in many cases a disunity within the maturation of personality.

Psychologist Abraham Maslow, who investigated healthy minds as a counterpoint to Freudian psychology’s preoccupation with studying the sick mind; found that a healthy person must have a vision and belief in the achievement of his/her goals. Maslow described this tendency for self-fulfilment or self-actualisation as “the desire to become more and more what one is, to become everything that one is capable of becoming.”

Maslow writes:

“A musician must make music, an artist must paint, a poet must write, if he is to be ultimately at peace with himself. What a man can be, he must be.”

The change always comes internally within the self-concept inside a person’s mind.

“You will either step forward into growth, or you will step backward into safety. If you plan on being anything less than you are capable of being, you will probably be unhappy all the days of your life.” ~

Abraham Maslow

Maslow later expanded his vision to include a higher level of human consciousness —self-transcendence, or having a spiritual goal outside of oneself.

Viktor Frankl writes in Man’s Search for Meaning that meaning is at the highest rung of human needs:

“There is nothing in the world, I venture to say, that would so e ectively help one to survive even the worst conditions, as the knowledge that there is a meaning in one’s life.”

Frankl goes on to write,

“Ultimately, man should not ask what the meaning of his life is, but rather must recognize that it is he who is asked. In a word, each man is questioned by life; and he can only answer to life by answering for his own life; to life he can only respond by being responsible.”

The human need is not for purpose at all costs including the loss of humanity, but for purpose that fulfills a goal worthy of each person; a higher purpose that inspires a deeper calling. It is in philosophy that one begins to understand what is common to humanity and also what culturally separates us. The search for meaning is arguably a Western trait. As for indigenous cultures, meaning was never lost because all of nature is imbued with meaning.

In the West, if we do not feel significant and part of the whole matrix around us then we are doomed to su er the gloom of detachment and ennui. Solutions put forward for inner harmony may include an embracement of nature and nature- centeredtherapies. The awakening of one’s freedom, one’s calling, is the invocation of Spirit to break free of social conditioning and pursue one’s lower and higher nature. Self-actualisation is inherently achieved by listening less to the indoctrination of society and more to the calling of one’s essence.

For Westerners, this may mean appreciating the rainbows in the clouds instead of painting pretty pictures with artificial light. It may mean feeling the call and following it to evolve how we see and create our world. Seekers will keep seeking until they are home in themselves. This is still a sacred path of discovery; unknown and unknowable without bravery, discipline and self-sacrifice.


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