Transcript for:
Understanding Suffering and Responsibility

It's not an accident that the axiomatic Western individual is someone who was unfairly nailed to a cross and tortured. It's like, yes, right, exactly. So what do you do about that? Well, I thought about that for a long time too.

It's like, well, you don't get together in a damn bob, because all that does is allow you to be as... Horrible as you could possibly imagine and suffer from none of the consequences. That's a bad idea So how about we don't do that?

Well, there's a deep idea in the West too It's like pick up your damn suffering and bear it and try to be a good person so you don't make it worse Well, that's a truth. You know, I read a lot about The terrible things that people have done to each other. You just cannot even imagine it.

It's so awful. So you don't want to be someone like that. Now, do you have a reason to be? Yes! You have lots of reasons to be.

God, there's reasons to be resentful about your existence. Everyone you know is going to die. You know, you too.

And there's going to be a fair bit of pain along the way, and lots of it's going to be unfair. It's like, yeah, no wonder you're resentful. It's like act it out and see what happens. You make everything you're complaining about infinitely worse.

There's this idea that hell is a bottomless pit, and that's because no matter how bad it is, some stupid son of a bitch like you could figure out a way to make it a lot worse. So you think, well, what do you do about that? Well, you accept it.

That's what life is like. It's suffering. That's what the religious people have always said. Life is suffering.

Yes. Well, who wants to admit that? Well, just think about it. Well, so what do you do in the face of that suffering?

Try to reduce it. Start with yourself. What good are you? Get yourself together, for Christ's sake, so that when your father dies, you're not whining away in a corner and you can help plan the funeral. And you can stand up solidly so that people can rely on you.

That's better. Don't be a damn victim. Of course you're a victim.

Jesus. Obviously. Put yourself together, and then maybe if you put yourself together, you know how to do that, you know what's wrong with you, if you'll admit it, you know there's a few things you could like polish up a little bit, that you might even be able to manage in your insufficient present condition, and so you might shine yourself up a little bit, and then your eyes will be a little more open, then you can shine yourself up a little bit more, and then maybe you could bring your family together, instead of having them be the hateful, spiteful, neurotic, infighting batch that you're like, doomed to spend Christmas with.

So then you fix yourself up a little bit, kind of humbly, because you know, God, you're a fixer-upper if there ever was one. And then you got to figure out, well, can you figure out how to make peace with your idiot brother? And probably not, because he's just as dumb as you, so how the hell are you going to manage that?

And so then you, maybe you get somewhere that way, and your family's sort of functioning, and you find out, well, that kind of relieved a little bit of suffering, although it... reduce the opportunities for spiteful revenge and that's kind of a pain in the neck. And so then you get your family together a little bit and you're a little clued in then, at least a bit, because you've done something difficult that's actually difficult. You're a little wiser and so then maybe you could put a tentative finger out beyond the family and try to change some little thing without wrecking it. It's like our society is complex and we teach our students that they could just fix it.

It's like... Go fix a military helicopter and see how far you get with that. It's like, you know what you're going to do? You're like a chimp with a wrench.

Whack! Oh look, it's better! It's like, no! It's not better.

Things are complicated and to fix things is really hard. And you have to be like a golden tool to fix things. And you're not!

So, and that's the other message of the West. It's like, how do you overcome the suffering of life? I'm not saying it's only the message of the West. How do you overcome the suffering of life?

Be a better person! That's how you do it! Well, that's hard. It takes responsibility.

And I think, you know, you said to someone, you want to have a meaningful life? Everything you do matters. That's the definition of a meaningful life. But everything you do matters. You're going to have to carry that with you.

Or do you want to just forget about the whole meaning thing? Then you don't have any responsibility because who the hell cares? You can wander through life doing whatever you want, gratifying impulsive desires for how useful that's going to be, and you're stuck in meaninglessness, but you don't have any responsibility. Which one do you want?

Well, ask yourself, which one are you pursuing? And you'll find very rapidly that it isn't the majority of your soul that's pursuing the whole meaning thing. Because, well, look what you have to do to do that.

You have to take on the fact that life is suffering. You have to put yourself together in the face of that. Well, that's hard. Christ, it's amazing people can even do it. I'm stunned every day when I go outside.

And it isn't a riot with everything burning. Really, God, you talk to people, it's like, I knew this guy, he'd been in a motorcycle accident, and it really ruined him, and he was like a linesman, you know, working on the power, and he was working with someone who had Parkinson's disease, and they had complementary inadequacies, and so, two of them could do the job of one person, and so they're out there fixing power lines in the freezing cold, despite the fact that one was three quarters wrecked with a motorcycle accident, and the other one had Parkinson's, it's like, That's how our civilization works. It's like there's all these ruined people out there They've got problems like you can't believe off they go to work and do things They don't even like and look the lights are on my god. It's unbelievable. It's it's a miracle It's a miracle and we're so ungrateful College students the postmodern types.

They're so ungrateful You know they don't know that they're surrounded by just a bloody miracle. It's a miracle that all this stuff works That all you crazy chimpanzees that don't know each other can sit in the same room for two hours sweltering away without tearing each other apart, because that's what chimps do. So, anyways, so, what happened?

Well, I made some videos, and I got to the bottom of some things, at least as far as I can tell, so I told you what the bottom is, and then I got this idea about what you might do about it. which isn't my idea, it's like it's not my idea, it's an old, old, old, old idea, it's far older than Christianity, it's old, it's the oldest story of mankind, get yourself together, transcend your suffering, see if you can be some kind of hero, make the suffering in the world less, well that's the way forward as far as I can tell, if there is any way forward, that's what's under assault by the post-modernists So look out because they know exactly what they're doing and they know exactly why they're doing it.