A few weeks ago, I met a man I found very
attractive. He was flirtatious, and I was interested. I backed off a bit when I
realized that he was quite generally flirtatious, not
just with me. But he showed that he missed my attentions, and I decided the
attraction between us was more than superficial. Over the next couple of weeks,
we gradually spent more and more time together. He seemed very happy that we
were getting closer, and so was I. I became increasingly sure that something
would happen between us.
About 2 ½ weeks into this little dance, we
were standing talking with a couple of other people when one of them asked him
about the arrangement he had with his boys’ mother: how much time did they
spend with him and how much with her? My ears pricked up – I’d asked him about
this earlier, and he’d given me a somewhat vague impression he was their
primary carer, but hadn’t said anything about their mother. Now he responded: “Oh,
no, they’re with us all the time.”
Us? For a few moments, I struggled to make
sense of this. Then I wondered if I should ask for clarification: are you
saying that you and your wife are together? I felt confused. But I realized
that the meaning of his response was clear. I had fallen for an almost
comically classic routine (though I certainly couldn’t see anything funny about
it at the time): the married man who gives the impression that he’s single to
keep the women interested.
I was furious – with myself as much as him.
Why had I let myself be taken in? The answer seemed obvious: my need had made
me vulnerable. It was all very well for him to flirt, and indulge a few little
fantasies during the day (presuming that was as far as it went), and then go home to his wife and kids each
night. It was different for me – I didn’t have a partner to go home to. I took
the fantasy seriously – way too seriously.
Earlier that day, the topic of languages
had come up. He and I both speak a second language, but not the same one. He
asked which language I spoke and how fluent I was. When I told him, he made
what had seemed an odd response, “You’ll probably show me up.” How could my
fluency in a language he didn’t speak at all possibly show him up? Now his
comment made more sense to me. Yes, we spoke different languages all right…
Jean-Paul Sartre |
It took me a couple of days to calm down. One
of the things that helped me get some perspective on the situation was
something another man I met recently said to me. He is an existentialist
therapist, who incidentally mentioned his girlfriend during our first five
minutes of conversation (a man of integrity!). Following Sartre, he believes
that everything that happens to him is something he has chosen. His girlfriend
finds this hard to accept (possibly she believes that some of the things that
happen to him are things that she has
chosen).
Had I chosen to be deceived? The question reminded
me of the ideas of a 19th century philosopher, William Clifford, who
argues for the “duty of inquiry” – that is, the principle that we shouldn’t
simply accept what we are told, at least if there is any sign that the
information may be unreliable, or if the potential consequences that flow from
relying on it are significant. He goes as far as to say that the credulous are
morally responsible for the corruption of society – it is they who tempt others
into deception.
William Clifford |
Hmm, was it possible that I was responsible
not only for choosing to be deceived, but for creating, through my wishful
thinking, a situation of temptation that a weak man had been unable to resist,
until, like a benevolent sorceress, a third party had helped him to utter the
magic words that would release him from the sticky web of naïve, but also
self-interested, attention and expectation that I had been artlessly spinning
around him? Who was the vulnerable party here, and who the seducer?
Or is it unhelpful to attempt to fix these
labels on either one of us? Responsibility that is framed in terms of black and
white, villains and victims, is always unstable. It’s constitutionally liable
to unexpected reversals, as the philosophical arguments show. The truth is that
we cooperated in creating the situation we found ourselves in. Neither of us
was completely powerful in it, nor completely powerless. Even if we didn’t say
the same things, we did speak a common language. It would be reductive to see
it purely as a language of seduction and deception, though you could say that
the syntax was dominated by these elements…
This doesn’t make me responsible for his
failure to mention his wife, or cancel out his own responsibility in the
situation, but actually I don’t think that this is Sartre’s point, either. The
existentialist approach as I interpret it is rather to say that the other
person’s responsibility is entirely his (or hers) – it’s not my concern, and I shouldn’t
attempt to judge it, or get worked up about it. The only thing I can judge or
work with is my own will – and I can and must always assume this responsibility.
This means I should regard the other person’s actions as I might regard a rock
falling from a cliff that has been weathered to the point of erosion (to take a
metaphor from Nietzsche), or a lettuce that isn’t doing so well (Thich Nhat
Hanh’s version). It makes no sense to get angry at a rock for falling, or blame
a lettuce for wilting – it’s obvious that what you need to do is just get out
of the way, or give the lettuce some water.
My own actions and reactions are another
matter – I can see them from the inside, infused with consciousness. This is why
my responsibility is total – because I can't see anyone else’s consciousness
from the inside, my own consciousness marks the absolute limits of
responsibility, in an existential sense. Admittedly, the problem of how to
assume this total responsibility is somewhat mysterious. There’s no formula to
tell you how to carry out existential responsibility. It seems more like an art
form than a morality. And sometimes more like a bungee jump than an art form.
This is the existential challenge as I see
it – it’s also the challenge of tango philosophy: to be willing to abandon
self-deception in all its forms (including self-seduction), and take a leap, or
at least a series of steps into the vast, clear air of consciousness. You might
expect that tango philosophy would be bound up with seduction, but as in the
dance of tango, the further you go into it, the less it’s about seduction, at
least in any ordinary sense, and the more it’s about cultivating a highly
responsive, clear and attentive state of mind.
2 comments:
* Hugs.
* "possibly she believes that some of the things that happen to him are things that she has chosen" - Made me laugh.
* I had no idea that William Clifford was a philosopher! You're right of course (Wikipedia tells me), but I only knew him as a mathematician. Interesting how a historical figure can be famous in two fields, but famous to separate audiences.
Thanks, Jason!
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