THURSDAY
30th SEPTEMBER
I had almost forgotten
that today was my birthday. It caught me
so totally unawares that it seems I have crossed the threshold into adulthood
and a certain indifference to, if not ironic detachment from, the whole idea of
celebrating one's birthday. When one is
a child one looks forward to such an occasion with an air of enraptured
expectancy, as though something near-miraculous were about to happen - not
exactly a rebirth so much as the receiving of the most wonderful presents in an
atmosphere of love and joy. Today,
however, my birthday means scarcely anything to me, having
the empty and superficially ironic ring of the single card which, received from
my mother (as might be expected), blandly reads: 'Have a wonderful
day!' If my birthday contains any
particular significance - aside, that is, from its numerical value and my
mental registration of the fact that I am now officially a year older than
yesterday - it can only be in the sense that, on account of the residue of a
few sentimental connotations remaining from previous birthdays, I would like
the day to pass without too many disturbances, shortcomings, or indiscretions
on the part of both me and my neighbours.
As it happens, I am almost afraid that it will be spoilt by a few
idiotic and puerile grievances between us.
(Strangely enough, I'm reminded of the seemingly futile efforts made by
various sections of the industrial working-class to consistently enjoy
themselves when, during the course of a three-week summer vacation, they are
obliged to make an attempt at doing so, else die of boredom. Somehow, one can never quite elude the
impression that they're fighting a losing battle in the face of the
overwhelming odds of a hard-working past stacked so unmercifully against them. Perhaps I am in a similar fix vis-à-vis my
neighbours?)
Be that as it may, it rather looks as though I shall have to
get along with the day's events, come what may. This time next week I'll probably be
accustomed to thinking of myself as a year older and be a lot less prickly
about how fate treats me in consequence.
I expect my mother is even now pricklier about it than myself. Either that or she doesn't really give a toss
any longer!
So twenty-four years' existence has led me, Michael James
Savage, to this room, this journal, these thoughts, together with certain
acquired facts and experiences, a few of which I now contemplate with a
distinctly ambivalent frame-of-mind. In
attempting to placate her propagative impulses my
mother was ultimately compelled to thrust me head-first into a doctor's gloved
hands, and no sooner had I woken up to the realization that I no longer had a
womb to protect and nourish me than I commenced hollering. Thus life began for me, as for everyone else,
from the strictly autocratic point-of-view.
Henceforth, I would be obliged to accept and respect my parents. My childhood would be one long orgy of
gratitude and dependence.
For a moment, I endeavour to contemplate the notion of my
father having his way with a fairly intelligent, though fundamentally
lascivious, woman who subsequently became my mother. Coming from a Catholic background, my
progenitors were strictly forbidden the use of contraceptives, so it was
evident that they would either have to produce offspring or drive each other
mad from perversion. As might be
expected, they chose the former course, and that is how I came into being. Despite his Bible and rosary beads, good
manners and ideals, aesthetic predilections and intellectual preoccupations, my
male progenitor was the possessor of a circumcised penis which, as the
focal-point of the 'will to life' (in the philosophical sense somewhat narrowly
espoused by Schopenhauer), ejaculated semen into my mother's womb, and the
long-term consequence of one such ejaculation - probably one of hundreds and
not necessarily the first either - was a tiny male baby who thereafter grew to
be the young man of twenty four who sits here today sadly contemplating his
birthday.
Of course, there is reason enough why it would be almost
justifiable for me to heap accusation after accusation upon my progenitors, to
criticize them for their apparent lack of foresight, to condemn their
delusions, weaknesses, fears, and conventions in the self-righteous name of my
current dissatisfactions. But I know only
too well that such a procedure wouldn't get me anywhere, seeing that I would
only further torture myself in their absence.
For, when all's said and done, one is essentially alone in this life and
the best one can do, short of seeking asylum in some political or religious
organization, is to persevere with it without unduly and foolishly torturing
oneself with misgivings, at the risk, needless to say, of regular psychological
crises.
To be sure, any criticism of one's parents' apparent inability
to restrain themselves from committing the 'supreme folly' (as I think Sartre
not unreasonably called it) of propagation can, with equal justice, be levelled
against one's grandparents, great-grandparents, great-great-grandparents, and
so on, until one eventually approaches the source of modern life by
discovering, in one's most distant ancestors, the morally irresponsible
imbeciles whose origins were evidently more ape-like than human! No doubt, they all acted in good faith,
realizing that any satisfactory sexual pleasure to be obtained through their
respective partners would inevitably lead to propagation, and that they would
consequently have no choice but to tag along with it and obey nature's
dictates, since there weren't any serious alternatives in a primitive
community, and one, moreover, where concepts like birth control, celibacy, and
solitude would have met with ridicule in view of the way wild beasts and enemy
tribes preyed upon one another with intent to advancing their own interests at
the expense of those weaker or stupider or less ruthless than themselves. But I don't want to go into the history of
the world or, indeed, of evolution on my birthday, since it is a thorny subject
at the best of times, without the necessity of my dragging it into this literary
journal because of a need to do something constructive and even courageous
(reckless?) today no less than on previous days. Still, this subject of propagation intrigues
me, so, despite my superficial qualms and regrets over how best to tackle it, I
think I'll persevere with it a while longer.
To begin with, there is my own life, a not particularly
eventful life (as we have seen) but a life of sorts all the same, and then
there are the lives of others, a great many of whom are undoubtedly suffering
in the most appalling conditions, whether here in England or, more usually, far
away in less-temperate parts of the world.
Whenever I think in terms of world population, I invariably shudder with
fright. For, regardless of the fact that
the globe is fast becoming an increasingly overcrowded place, the population of
a majority of countries continues to rise, as though nothing were happening and
there was little reason to take birth control seriously. Naturally, the chief powers are now building
better armies, navies, and air forces than ever before. But all that is somehow relative to the
apparent need of modern man to destroy en masse and universally, rather than on a
restricted scale corresponding, say, to the Battle of Hastings. There is something evolutionary about it
which makes it unlikely that the process could be dramatically reversed. Neither can alliances be made, armaments be
sold, manoeuvres be carried out, or forces be maintained, if not increased, unless
one is guaranteed an enemy or, at the very least, a potential enemy, so that
the world, or a substantial portion of it, can be divided into two or more
hostile camps which then fly competing flags in the names of freedom,
democracy, communism, fascism, capitalism, equality, nationalism, industrialism,
religion, ecology, fundamentalism, liberalism, or whatever. The interrelativity
of things is inescapable, and no successful armaments manufacturer can avoid
being effectively indebted to the enemy, or potential enemy, for supplying the
continual need of defence.
At this very moment, throughout virtually every corner of the
world, soldiers, sailors, and pilots are earnestly undergoing preparations for
another major war by perfecting the art of martial aggression, whether
defensively or offensively or even some paradoxical combination of the two; by
learning new combat techniques which will enable them to keep ahead of the
enemy; by acquiring new military hardware which is superior to anything the
other side may possess and which, when combined with everything else, will
ensure that they'll be on the victorious side if and when another war is
declared and they suddenly find themselves being rushed into action, called
upon by society to justify the expenditure incurred in both training and equipping
them, to utilize their martial skills, defend their country, sovereign,
principles, rights, freedoms, and so on - a veritable host of magnificent
ideals!
Were Hermann Hesse alive today he
could doubtless be relied upon to offer a credible prognosis concerning the
future course of world events with the same eloquence and perspicacity as if he
were talking of Germany in the 1920s and '30s.
Since then, however, the world has pressed on again, re-drawn its
frontiers, and crowned its evolutionary aspirations with wider-ranging
ideological incentives which now require new warnings, analogues, criticisms,
and prognostications.
It may seem strange, but a majority of those who daily live
under the threat of nuclear or biological extinction are still capable of being
reasonably responsible. They sense the
war god towering above their teeming populations, leering down at them, mocking
their attempts at reform, yelling at the top of his cynical voice: "No
life without death, no peace without war, no love without hate, no light
without darkness, no right without wrong, no human being without human
nature!" and they huddle closer together into various philanthropic
organizations, consider compromises, suggest propagation-amendment laws which
forbid families from having more than two children; suggest compulsory
euthanasia for seriously malformed children, congenital lunatics, dangerous
criminals, victims of painfully incurable diseases, geriatric invalids, etc.;
suggest state-controlled abortion, state-run contraception, compulsory
vasectomy, artificial insemination, and whatever else comes desperately to
mind. But well-intentioned though some
of these schemes may be, their implementation would probably spark off a
violent revolution and thereby defeat their objectives. The existing governments of a majority of
countries would be unable or unwilling to authorize such measures, being
obliged, instead, to watch the war god looming over the masses in a threatening
posture, to let the masses propagate at random, to bludgeon one another in the
name of freedom, and eventually to thin one another out by the conventional
method of mass extermination - another major war!
No, euthanasia, state-controlled abortion,
propagation-amendment laws, and the like are all very well theoretically. But their literal implementation would
ultimately conflict with pro-life teachings of the Church and thereby place the
entire democratic system in jeopardy. If
the worst comes to the worst, another world war will curb the current
population of the globe quite adequately.
In fact, there'll hardly be need for a plague afterwards, the war will have ...
Damn it! I'm not going to torment myself with any more of that
kind of idle speculation. It seems
likely, after all, that the world's population will continue to rise for some
time to come. There will undoubtedly be
more screaming brats and overcrowded flats, more social frustrations and
national inflations, more congested pavements and homeless vagrants, more
social handouts and moral cop-outs, more long-term unemployment and military
deployment. In the main, however, people
will continue to take things more or less for granted. Indeed, some of them will even kid themselves
that the world is becoming an increasingly better place to live in, that
today's youths have far greater opportunities for 'getting on' in life than any
previous generation ever had, that the standard of living has improved beyond
recognition in recent years, and that the one definitive all-knowing God of the
New Testament, not to mention His all-powerful Old Testament progenitor who in some countries counts for a great deal
more, is both protecting and guiding the world towards a still brighter future,
while simultaneously restraining the impulse to personally intervene, in order
that His followers may faithfully continue to work in His name until, ever
mindful of the Last Judgement, they die in a condition of optimistic
resignation rather than pessimistic foreboding!
Throughout the coming decades, the average man will continue to
be so habitually deprived, both materially and spiritually, though especially
spiritually, that he will be unable to comprehend or objectify the extent of
his deprivation. So much will it have
become a part of his daily routine ... that he'll have no real option but to
take it for granted.
He may even go so far as to consider himself relatively fortunate that
habit and insensitivity have largely blinded him to the extent of his personal
misfortune, and that he is still 'better off' than certain other categories of
people - the mentally retarded, for instance, or the incurably insane. He will get up early, every weekday, feeling
utterly dejected at the prospect of having to go to an underpaid and overworked
job for some seven or eight hours. He will
struggle through the day like a man at the end of his psycho-physical tether,
and when he eventually arrives home again to an equally tired, humiliated, and
short-tempered working wife, he'll automatically turn to the TV, sprawl in
front of it for the rest of the evening, take the most part of what he sees for
granted, no matter how vulgar or violent it may happen to be, and, finally,
clamber into bed with a filmic hangover, absolutely dying to submerge himself
in the inky darkness of world-defying night!
Indeed, he will have become so accustomed to his personal
hardships that if a man were suddenly to faint in front of him in the street,
one day, he would walk over his prostrate body as though it didn't really
exist. He will see millions of cars,
buses, taxis, vans, trucks, and lorries, but he won't
worry too much about the extent of their combined exhaust fumes or the degree
to which they daily pollute the atmosphere.
Neither will he wonder where all the new vehicles are going, those being
regularly churned-out of their factories on a conveyor-belt process which, once
sold, will make the roads an even noisier, busier, dirtier, smellier, and more
sickening experience than they already are at present. Oh no!
He will have to turn what is commonly known as a 'blind eye'. For once the industrial cogs have started
turning (and turning with increasingly desperate momentum as time goes by), you
can't just stop them overnight and make millions of men redundant, even if
their labour does contribute to
making the world a worse place to live in, an increasingly hazardous
arena. He will simply have to accept so
many absurdities, imbecilities, misfortunes, tragedies, and other regrettable
facts of contemporary life ... that any genuine self-respect, personal dignity,
or individualistic principles to which he might still lay some sort of
attenuated claim will be brought into utter ridicule as an affectation of
vainglorious egocentricity - the sort of delusions of antiquated grandeur an
easily dispensable and relatively insignificant social pawn shouldn't have any
recourse to, no matter who he happens to think he is! Social pawns should be seen and not heard,
used and not touched, bought and not sold!
No sooner have I written the above than it occurs to me that,
in society's impersonal eyes, I am also an easily dispensable and relatively
insignificant social pawn, to be pushed around the glorified chessboard of the
marketplace by those who have a vested interest in securing a few extra points
for themselves at the expense of all those less well-placed pawns. Admittedly, I'm not being pushed around it
very much at the moment, especially with a recession biting the hands of the
pushers. But, all the same, I don't have
any real say in things and I'm certainly not asked for an opinion as to how
best the game should be played, so that, for once, the pawns, and not the
pawn-pushers, might be the ones to profit from it. Even if I do occasionally hit upon
a solution to a given problem with a conviction that puts alternative
considerations beyond doubt, it is a completely gratuitous event so far as the
world in general is concerned, something that isn't guaranteed to appeal to the
pawn-pushers, and something that, transferred to paper, may well lose much of
the cutting-edge of conviction as it undergoes literary transmutation and
becomes diluted with fictional lies in the interests of a more commercial
presentation, a presentation which even then might prove too unadulterated for
the liking of those people whose preference is rather more for blissful
ignorance than the painful truth!
Yes, but I have to do something too! I have to dispel time's cruel tyranny as best
I can, no matter what the outcome. There
is a fair possibility that, even with the vagaries of fate to consider, I may
have to live through another fifty or so birthdays before I die and pass beyond
their reach to an eternity of self-oblivion the other side of mortal
death. During the intervening time, I
will doubtless have to keep myself reasonably preoccupied: to write, think,
read, listen to music, watch TV, etc., as well as to eat, drink, sleep, walk,
talk, etc., in accordance with human necessity.
But I know for a fact that I am by no means resigned to the possibility
of ever being partly responsible, as a parent, for condemning another human
being to 70-odd years experience, whether directly or indirectly, permanently
or temporarily, constantly or intermittently, of such places as Crouch End or Muswell Hill, and to such things as constipation,
diarrhoea, glandular fever, bronchitis, appendicitis, tonsillitis, peritonitis,
tuberculosis, pneumonia, influenza, coryza, colds in
general, stomach aches, earaches, toothaches, headaches, migraine, eye strain,
myopia, insomnia, growing pains, cramps, B.O., nausea, vertigo, mumps, measles,
chickenpox, V.D., schizophrenia, cancer, sciatica, halitosis, dandruff, boils,
pimples, warts, moles, cysts, sties, blisters, mouth ulcers, stomach ulcers,
alcoholism, tobacco addiction, drug addiction, destitution, nightmares, boredom,
worry, mental strain, nervous breakdowns, frustration, regret, despair, guilt,
fear, hate, suspicion, humiliation, anger, manic depression, depressions in
general, neurosis, psychosis, loneliness, unrequited love, anachronistic
institutions, graveyards, derelict houses, excessive pollution, traffic
congestion, traffic noise, traffic accidents, accidents in general, overcrowded
pavements, smelly money, inflation, economic recession, commercial
exploitation, cacophonous music, predatory advertisements, political
incompetence, noisy neighbours, noisy neighbourhoods, hammerings, drillings, sawings, barkings, dogs' shit on
pavements, dogs' piss on walls, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, hurricanes,
plagues, wars, famines, droughts, thefts, rapes, murders, perversions,
suicides, lies, purges, putches, riots, tanks, bombs,
warships, warplanes, nuclear submarines, revolutions, racism, jingoism, deluded
philosophers, deluded philosophies, prisons, lunatic asylums, mines, factories,
courts, offices, barracks, etc., etc., ad nauseam!
No, I have no pressing desire to propel any prospective child
of mine into that kind of world, however
tempting it may sometimes be in the light of social and/or sexual
pressures. Yet, despite that, I just
can't imagine myself being so selfish or weak or besotted as to alleviate my
boredom, depression, loneliness, tension, desire, or whatever, at the expense,
effectively, of a poor naive young child who wouldn't understand what sort of a
world it had been born into until it was too damn late.
Yes, the truth, it seems, is rarely flattering to our
egos! Yet for some considerable period
of time now it has been the policy of society to coat certain aspects of the
bitter truth in sweet lies, in order to propagate universal delusion and thereby
mitigate the harsh reality of having to swallow a pill which would otherwise
prove unpalatable to all but the most fearlessly honest.
People who are philosophically conscious of striving after the
truth, however, have little stomach for the lies with which the pill of factual
reality is normally coated, since such things go against their philosophical
grain and may even lead to a type of mental indigestion or blockage which would
be far more damaging to their souls than ever the truth could be. Such people must look into the various things
with which they are concerned as honestly as possible, examine them closely,
and then endeavour to formulate rational judgements about them which may lead
to a discovery of their true worth.
Thus when I considered what I regard as some of the more
unfortunate consequences of propagation, a short while ago, I was attempting to
do just that, and I must confess it deeply troubled me to think that, in a
moment of mental weakness or under the tyranny of love, of possessive emotional
obsession with another person, I too might be forced to follow my parent's
example and wind-up condemning an innocent child to a lifetime's sentence in
the prison of contemporary reality!
Of course, I know something about love or, at any rate,
unrequited love, so I'm aware that, under its pressing influence, a person may
commit a child to life without appreciating the true nature of what he has done
- indeed, that he may be so powerless to resist the sway of his beloved that
anything short of propagation would appear unrealistic, if not downright
foolish and self-defeating! But I'm also
aware that one day his love will disappear as suddenly as it came, leaving him,
in later years, with two or three wretched adolescents on his hands who will
probably despise him for having plagued them with modern life. Furthermore, I'm well aware that there are
plenty of young women in this paradoxical world whose principal justification
for marrying would be the experience of raising children and thereby securing
for themselves an acceptable degree of maternal preoccupation, without which
their lives, ever subject to menstrual pressures, would doubtless become quite
intolerable, since they wouldn't know how else to justify themselves to
themselves, and the justification for living with a man would sooner or later
be called into question, if not completely invalidated.
To be sure, even today, in this age of female liberation, there
are many such women in the world, women who seek in marriage the experience of
raising a family not simply as a means of both justifying their natural
obligations and exploring their maternal potential in all its ramifications,
spiritual as well as physical, but of justifying and cementing their
relationship to a man, forcing them to tolerate the vicissitudes of marital
life for the sake of their children, with the possible eventuality that, having
grown up and left home, these same children will do them proud in later years,
and perhaps even protect or support them, not to mention honour their place of
burial - assuming they're not cremated - through the posthumous commemoration
of their 'deathday' in the fragrant afterlife of
floral tributes?
Once these children have grown up and left home, however, the
parents may still decide to remain together, in order to be of some consolation
to each other during their remaining years.
It may even transpire that they will then find time to look back over
their earlier years together, to reflect on the nature of life in general, to
formulate little prohibitions which may be of some help to their grandchildren,
and to frown upon the promiscuous trends of modern society, with its polygamous
decadence where some are concerned and polygamous barbarism where others are
concerned, neither of which categories would greatly appeal to the monogamous
conservatism of our imaginary couple!
Naturally, they'll have the recollection of a full and varied
life to console them in the face of the manifold iniquities of contemporary
youth, satisfying themselves that they did their matrimonial duty, and that
their deaths will accordingly summon the blessed full-stop to a well-executed
sentence of living. In their declining
years they'll also learn how to preoccupy themselves without the help of
children (occasional contacts with grandchildren notwithstanding), much less
the panacea of casual sex. But that
bridge will have to be crossed when they get to it, and not a moment before!
Meanwhile the world's population will continue to rise and the
standard of living to fall, as the cost of survival becomes steadily higher and
the prospect of paying it correspondingly lower!