Who Are we?
If we were to strip away the effects of our upbringing, imparted religious and social values, what would we be left with? Would this be our authentic self? Is who we are not of our own choosing, but born out of our socialization?
I recently viewed the documentary film "Lost White Male." In it, a young white male finds himself on a New York City subway heading to the Coney Island section of Brooklyn, not knowing who he is, why he is on the train or where he is going. This is a true story; this man had suffered for some unknown reason complete amnesia. He had no knowledge of his past, including childhood, family, friends, occupation, not even where he lived! He eventually found someone who knew him. He had to reacquaint himself with his life, quite literally reinventing himself. Those that had known him said that he was the "same man" but a "different person", a person with less edge, more emotionally forthcoming, more honest.
Is that "different person" within, being held hostage by all the stuff we have accumulated during our lives? What do we bring to our relationships that is authentically who we are? And, how much of who we are not, is playing havoc in our lives and our relationships. I believe that most of us are merely acting out our socialization, much of which is merely accepted as true and not been tested. It is only by validating what we say or think we believe, whether it's our sexuality or spiritual beliefs, concepts regarding love and relationships through our own experience, does it become true for us.
The paradox is that even though these concepts are not routinely validated, we continue to apply them to our lives, relegating ourselves to a cycle on disillusionment. This is particularly apparent in choosing and keeping a partner, where we find ourselves in different relationships with the same person. Finding out who we are and who we are not, in my opinion is the key.
How much of what we call our identity is really serving us in our relationships? I think that many of us suspect that what we project is not our real self. Dr. David Schnarch in his book "The Passionate Marriage” says that many of us in our relationships "...don't really want somebody to know who you are, you just want somebody to validate you instead." This validation is of what Dr. Schnarch refers to a "projected sense of self", a self that may not have a in basis in reality, but how we want or expect others to see us, whether positive or negative.
In the end, we must discover our authentic selves and discard what does not really represent us and gets in the way of personal fulfillment. How do we do this? It’s a process. Roy Frank of The FLOW and I disagree on this point. He feels that we already know who we are, I say how can we? Nowhere is our quest for self-definition more apparent than in the ascendancy of the current celebrity culture where many vicariously experience life through their favorite celeb. Whether in politics, movies, TV, or even the latest 15 minute, media created personality, we seek external validation of who we are as well as who we are not. Our authentic selves are cluttered by manufactured celebrity and consumption. And, when we look at the real lives of these celebrity facades their lives, too often, are more disillusioned than our own.
Again, how do we do discover who we are? It is a process. Discovering who we are entails looking at our choices and not only why we make them, but where do they come from. Whether from our upbringing, religious beliefs, social conditioning, or unresolved baggage, this journey requires a striping away to our essential self, where we become that “different person” and consequently begin to have different, fulfilling, relationship outcomes.
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I agree with the major premise of this posting...I'm not sure that most of us seek to emulate celebrities, but I do wholeheartedly agree that often life calls for us to live prescribed roles and this can be very different from our authentic self. While I'm not altogether certain that these roles are a negative thing, real damage is done when we completely forget or abandon who we really are. As we go through life, there are roles that we are assigned,ie., daughter, sister, mother, wife, friend, etc. and often we have no real choice in this assignment. How we show up in those roles gets influenced by many things and yes quite possibly even at the expense of self. In our professional lives, business and social interactions, it is not uncommon that other roles or characteristics be required for success, advancement, etc.
In a truly healthy intimate relationship, we should be able to take off all the masks, those we put on as well as those placed on us and have a place with our partner where true authenticity reigns, for both parties. And, that's a beautiful thing.
The nature of truth
I believe who we are is in perpetual relationship to where we are, who and what are we connected to.
Think about it. If at birth, you were placed on a deserted island, and lets say by chance, you survived through the years, mimicking things in the environment...
What would be your true nature? That of which you do on the island? Because you could have been placed on another island,where influences differ...
Is our true nature earthly?
Are we trying to identify our true nature, through earthly limitations?
I think our true nature exist beyond definition, and will continue to flee from us, the more we pursue it.
The more we attempt to identify it, the more we exhaust the very language, that commences with limitations, taking us to where we began, when asking the question...
Who's asking the question?
Is it through our true nature, that the question originate?
It's circular...
No matter how we ask the question, it will be done through a particular format we have selected to speak from.. Is our true nature a matter of changing formats, until we arrived to one that fits our true nature.. ( smile)
Our true nature, I believe, is at the source, from where we all came...
without earthly obstruction to knowing it..
I think on a deeper level we are driven back to our true nature... or we desire to ge back...
Every question is filtered through our personal formats.
And it is from there, the derailmant begins, I believe, to answering the question, "what is my true nature.. It will always be a question, resisting definition, that is unless,
our true is to ask the question.... " what is our true nature"