Tag: truth

  • On Unnecessary Truth

    Truth is complicated. Truth is personal. And truth is important.

    However, there are definitely white lies, and truths we feel, yet shouldn’t tell.

    For truth to be valuable, it needs to be necessary. What is an unnecessary truth? Unnecessary truth, is truth that doesn’t serve for good, but for ill. An example of such a truth might be how we think a baby is downright ugly. What good would come of telling the baby’s mother? None. We’d injure her with our words, and yes, words cause the worst injuries.

    So, no, I won’t always tell the whole truth as I see it, unless I believe the whole truth is necessary. Often, it isn’t.

  • on Belief

    This post has nothing to do with religion.

    What do you believe? I believe many things, so since I said I’d say what I believe and I try to do as I say I will, here are some of the things in which I believe, along with a spattering of things in which I don’t. If there is any repetition it might be poetic liberty, it might be because those truths most vital to us bear reinforcement, or it might simply be in error – the choice of which is entirely up to you.

    ~ I Believe ~

    ~

    I believe the picture we have of ourself is not the picture others see.
    I believe in what I can see, unless what I feel tells me that what I see isn’t really real.
    I believe divinity dwells within, yet for whatever reason we seek it without.
    I believe we all know the truth, and the truth is different for all.
    I believe in the soul, and that souls are fragments of the divine.
    I believe every living thing, from the smallest single-celled organism to the largest tree, has a soul and that it takes every single soul to make up the broken fragments of what may once have been a single whole.
    I believe all life must end, yet souls seldom do.
    I believe in fate, as much as I believe in freedom.
    I believe the divine speak a universal language every soul understands, if only their hosts choose to hear.
    I believe the divine don’t need to teach us how to hear, that is knowledge we already bear, though we may have forgotten, or closed our inner ear.
    I believe I can fly, and that in my dreams, I do.

    ~

    I believe the goal of all organized religions is the sustenance of its clergy, before sustenance of its adherent’s souls.
    I believe any god who has a chosen people, is the creation of those who claim he chose them.
    I believe souls are the animators of life.
    I believe our soul is the only gift the divine will ever grant us.
    I believe souls are not a gift at all, but a temporary loan we may choose to invest, or we may choose to squander.
    I believe we nurture our soul with our good deeds, or we starve it with our greed.
    I believe material wealth is the blade which slays the immaterial soul.
    I believe our path to nirvana is paved with our good deeds, and barred with our ill.
    I believe in your soul, do you believe in mine?

    ~

    I believe truth is the foundation on which trust is built.
    I believe words are the foundations of deeds.
    I believe thoughts are the foundations of words.
    I don’t believe I know what forms the foundations of thoughts.
    I am willing to believe, right until I perceive the lie.
    I believe in what I feel, more than in what I see.
    I believe in what I understand, more than in what I’m told.
    I believe in equality.
    I believe no human holds authority over any other.
    I believe in my own personal truths, more than I believe mass-media lies.
    I believe you matter, and that I matter too.

    ~

    I believe that to every absolute, there is an exception.
    I believe mortal flesh is merely a temporary home for an immortal soul.
    I believe the surest way to starve our soul, is to feed our mortal greed.
    I believe our soul cannot be destroyed by anyone save ourself.
    I believe those eager to slay another have already slain their soul.
    I believe in words more than in silence.
    I believe that sometimes I need silence more than I need words.
    I believe that when we are lost, our soul always knows the way.
    I believe a single ill deed far outweighs a myriad good.
    I believe our flesh is mortal, yet our soul is not.
    I believe that although our soul occupies our flesh, we can never own our soul.
    I believe I can try, and that in my dreams I do.

    ~

    I believe we were all once fluent in the language of the divine
    – it’s a little inner voice
    that tells us right from wrong,
    – it’s an inner voice of reason
    in a world that’s lost its mind,
    – it’s a voice that grows dimmer with every ill deed
    until we hear its voice no more.

    ~

    I believe while human words may well be wise, no human words are ever holy.
    I believe the divine have no need of intermediaries, for their words already flood our heart, soothe our soul, and echo deep within our inner ear.
    I believe everyone who claims to speak for the divine is a liar, for what need have the divine of translators when their language must be universal or it cannot be divine?
    I believe those who listen to their clerics, too often turn a deaf ear to their soul.
    I believe risk should be balanced with reward, but reward should not be repayment for risk.
    I believe the truth is never ugly, though what it reveals far too often is.
    I believe greed is an instrument of evil that bears many forms, all of which are sculpted by mortal desire… greed for influence, wealth, power, sex, control, immortality, and a myriad more.
    I believe indoctrinating children is an unforgivable act of malicious evil.
    I believe in me, do you believe in you?

    ~

    I believe the only one truly evil creature upon our earth is man.
    I believe that what the oceans relinquish, the sky returns as rain.
    I believe no cleric holds the keys to heaven, while many open the gates of hell.
    I believe in justice, more than I believe in laws.
    I believe eternity is a very short time.
    I believe time passes but it does not exist, and we are swimming against its flow.
    I believe the only fitting punishment for a murderer, is to be murdered in their turn.
    I believe it is better to be loved by a single person than it is to be merely remembered by a multitude.
    I believe respect should be earned, not assumed.
    I believe none should speak for the gods, for the gods can speak for themselves.
    I believe those who call for villainous deeds are as guilty as the villains called to commit them.
    I believe forgiveness is far beyond the realm of mortals.

    ~

    I believe when sellers are honest there is no need for buyers to beware.
    I believe there has never been a just war, yet I know many honorable men have fought.
    I believe for every inch won, an inch is always lost.
    I believe divinity dwells within, and we are merely its decorators, we may choose to clad our soul in the splendor of good deeds, or the squalor of ill.
    I believe humanity should be Earth’s caretaker, not Earth’s cancer.
    I believe a god not universally known, cannot be a universal god.
    I believe any question worth asking, is a question worth answering honestly.
    I believe our heart is the chamber in which the words of our soul echo, and that when it murmurs we should always listen.
    I believe if we’re too scared to dream, we’ve given up the better part of life.
    I believe I can cry, and that in my dreams I do.

    ~

    I believe that as with freedom, for truth we pay a price.
    I believe women are the far better half of man.
    I believe those who cannot question, will never understand.
    I believe memory is fiction, yet we think of it as fact.
    I believe fictitious memory is the foundation upon which we build ourself.
    I believe for everyone who cares, a multitude do not.
    I believe we are all born innocent, yet our innocence is soon lost.
    I believe good people sometimes do bad things, yet once people embrace bad they never again do good.
    I believe whoever, wherever, and whenever we are, we are merely people.
    I believe we all seek happiness, and some understanding too.
    I believe while no one is born better than any other, their deeds can make them so.
    I believe we should seek understanding before everything, especially material wealth.
    I believe if we can’t reveal our real self then our real self is not worth revealing.

    ~

    I believe everybody values truth, yet everybody lies.
    I believe in a myriad things, they may seem silly to you but they remain crucial to me.
    I believe who we are can be far more than just our genes, or far less.
    I believe that although no good deed goes unpunished, good deeds must still be done.
    I believe mistakes should not be punished, while willfully wicked deeds should.
    I believe my truths may work for me, but they probably won’t for you.
    I believe words really matter, though they rarely do.
    I believe those who call for the murder of their foes are the foulest of our form.

    ~

    I believe we should celebrate beauty, acknowledge shame, and not be so eager to apportion blame.
    I believe though we should honor our beliefs, it is inevitable we will sometimes fail.
    I believe the principle sign of intelligence is the ability to change our own mind.
    I believe history is written by the victors, and far too often it’s nothing but a biased lie.
    I believe we should vote on the issues, not on our emotions.
    I believe for one person to be rich, a multitude must be poor.
    I believe the truths I hold today, I may see as false tomorrow.

    ~

    I believe honor can never for sale.
    I believe a soul for sale is not worth its price.
    I believe humanity consistently displays collective stupidity, and individual brilliance.
    I believe we should try, even when we know we’ll fail.
    I believe in free will, yet I know the majority still won’t.
    I believe the world needs far less tolerance of poor behavior.
    I believe that X resources divided among Y people, where Y is greater than seven billion, should be X/Y, not (½X / 85) = (½X / (Y – 85))
    I believe truth is a matter of life more than a matter of mathematics.
    I believe no matter the magnificence of a lie’s disguise, the lie itself is ugly.
    I believe the shabbiest garments do not detract from truth’s beauty.
    I believe we are universally drawn toward truth, and universally repulsed by lies.
    I believe no one really knows, though too many claim they do.

    ~

    I believe happiness has become a hopeless goal, where once it was reality.
    I believe in the right to self-determination and self-defense, not compulsion and attack.
    I believe that just as no size fits all, no one truth does either.
    I believe those who care matter, and those who don’t just don’t.
    I believe the purest truth flows within the caverns of our heart.
    I believe partial truths are often complete lies.
    I believe what we say doesn’t matter if there is no one to hear what we say.
    I believe short-term profits never justify long-term pains.

    ~

    I believe to find beauty we must ardently seek it, but closing our eyes to ugliness allows ugliness to remain.
    I believe if we seek understanding we’ll eventually find it, but if we don’t we won’t.
    I believe time waits for no one, but eventually claims us all.
    I believe once you wear a price tag once, you’re always up for sale.
    I believe though change is inevitable, people are always the same.
    I believe in complex contradictory truths more than simply aligned lies.
    I believe when something is so obvious it simply must be true, we truly need to simply examine it again.
    I believe we should listen to our heart before we bow before our mind.
    I believe our heart pays the penalty long before our mind perceives the foul.
    I believe if we’re given a choice of difficult versus easy, we’ll choose easy every time.
    I believe while collectives are easy to fool, individuals are not.
    I believe when someone claims to have your best interests at heart, they really have their own.
    I believe the only things we truly create are our children, yet they aren’t our creations at all.
    I believe once honor is relinquished, it can never be regained.
    I believe there are holy words but they aren’t uttered by other men, they echo in our inner ear where only we can hear them.
    I believe true friends are so rare the fingers of one hand suffice to count them, and that that number excludes the thumb.
    I believe when we find our soul unbalanced we can either stop, sit, and reel, or we can stagger on and fall.

    ~

    I believe sometimes the universe sews two souls together, and sometimes it rips those souls apart.
    I believe love is like a light, with somebody else at the switch.
    I believe sometimes we do things wrong and cannot put them right.
    I believe if we refuse to look into our heart we cannot hope to see.
    I believe the last person I’ll ever understand, is me.
    I believe there has never been anyone like you and there never will be again.
    I believe sometimes the universe is kind enough to let us glimpse love’s glory, and at others it doesn’t seem to care.
    I believe the hardest lies to see are those we tell ourself.
    I believe I can fly, and if you let yourself dream you could too.

    ~

    And after this minuscule, fractional list detailing some things I believe, I think you may still find yourself asking the question, “But does he believe in the same God as me?” If you do then let me ask, “Why does it matter? Is the revealed content of my heart not enough?” However I’ll also answer with an unequivocal, “No, I do not believe in the same god as you.” To me the question of gods is so complex a subject it must wait for another day, or perhaps even another lifetime.

    {P.S. It is said that a writer should show not tell, as I seldom listen to platitudes that pretend to be wisdom I have simply told. However if you’d prefer to see, then this is where you’ll find the “show”.}

  • On Blasphemy.

    So many people are such moral cowards they find themselves unable to question things that are obviously wrong.

    Could this trait be one of the poor outcomes of that terrible policy known as “political correctness”? Do we fear speaking the truth as we see it, because we’re afraid we might offend someone who sees truth a different way? Are we so unsure of our own beliefs we don’t dare listen to someone who believes differently than us? When did we become so proficient at self-censorship?

    So-called “political correctness” effectively suppresses one of the most fundamental rights of humanity.  The right to Freedom of Speech. Political correctness, is wrong.

    And when the topic turns to religion, political correctness goes rampant. Is the topic of religion repulsive? Perhaps it is to you, but so what? Just because you’re uncomfortable saying what you truly believe, the rest of humanity must shut the hell up? Get over yourself. I don’t care if talking about something that affects substantially more than half of humanity makes you nervous – this is something humanity needs to talk about.

    In ages past I think political correctness had other names. One of those names is censorship, which is something every thinking person abhors. Censorship is never good. Why? Because it actively prevents the dissemination of information. Censorship does nothing to protect people, and it is never enacted with that goal in mind. Censorship is enacted and enforced to protect special interests. Censorship is sold to an unthinking populace through the use of emotive, distracting words like “safety”, “national security”, “pornography”, and “decency”. When censorship began failing, political correctness made an appearance.

    We’re now subtly encouraged to censor ourselves, with all the same lies as the motivators to our silence. That is precisely what political correctness is, our silence on troubling topics.  No thanks.

    Another past name for political correctness may well have been blasphemy. And thus begins the real topic of this post.

    Throughout the ages the word blasphemy has been one of the most effective tools of censorship in existence. Sadly, this remains true today. The word blasphemy holds enormous power over people. Virtually nobody is willing to be labeled a blasphemer. It doesn’t matter who you are, it doesn’t matter whether you’re devoutly religious or virulently atheist – you don’t even want to think of yourself of as a blasphemer.

    You’re scared.

    Scared people are easy to control. How does it feel to realize you’re being controlled through your fears? For me, it doesn’t feel good at all. Indeed, it feels so badly wrong that I’m spending my very precious personal time writing about it.

    Dictionary.com defines blasphemy thus:-

    noun, plural blasphemies.

    1. impious utterance or action concerning God or sacred things.
      1. an act of cursing or reviling God.
      2. pronunciation of the Tetragrammaton (YHVH) in the original, now forbidden manner instead of using a substitute pronunciation such as Adonai.
    2. the crime of assuming to oneself the rights or qualities of God.
    3. irreverent behavior toward anything held sacred, priceless, etc.: “He uttered blasphemies against life itself.”
    Since things on the Internet are constantly in flux, the image below is of the page as it existed when I wrote this post.

    blasphemyThe very definition of the word blasphemy reveals just how ridiculous the concept is. Allow me to examine it from another view of true. Actually, since I’m a active proponent of Freedom of Speech as a fundamental human right, I don’t need your permission to say what I think, so I’m not asking for it. If you don’t want to risk reading something that might just possibly contradict something you hold so sacred you dare not question it, then leave now. Freedom of Speech does not include a clause that requires other people to listen.

    Clause 1. “impious utterance or action concerning God or sacred things.”

    The definition could stop there. This clause is such an effective, catch-all, gag order that there is pretty much nothing more that needs saying. Except, of course, that there is a lot more that requires addressing.

    For example, the implicit monotheistic assumption that God is singular. How offensive is that assumption to those who choose to believe in multiple deities? It is so offensive it should be labeled blasphemous. It just isn’t politically correct at all! Strike it from record!

    The first clause’s definition then moves on from the sublime to the ridiculous by mentioning, “or sacred things.” Seriously? Is the Sun not sacred? How about the wind, the rain, the sky, the earth upon which we tread, or the heavens overhead? I’m not allowed to make impious utterances about anything? Give me a break already. Actually don’t bother, since you hold no authority over me I don’t need your permission and I’ll just take one. {But hold that thought… you know, the thought about who holds authority over you.}

    Clause 2. “Judaism.”

    First, I must say I find it extremely offensive that one of the most numerically insignificant religions in the world gets such prominent placement in a dictionary.  Such prominent placement that far more popular religions are not even mentioned. Look up the numbers, Judaism accounts for less than a quarter of a single percentage point of the entire world’s population.

    Oh, I’m sorry, is my mentioning a statistical fact that reveals how something insignificant is given completely disproportionate weight blasphemous? Too bad. It is a fact. Which makes it the truth, and how could the truth possibly be blasphemous? {Actually, I don’t believe in the concept of truth, I believe in the concept of perceptive truth. More about that elsewhere on my blog.}

    The sub-text of clause b further highlights just how ridiculous the concept of blasphemy is. If dictionary.com is to be believed, and I don’t see any reason to doubt it, then it is actually blasphemous to pronounce the Tetragrammaton, which is the Hebrew word for God, the way it was originally written in the Hebrew holy texts. I’m trying hard to wrap my mind around this, but it is so transparently stupid I’m actually having difficulty comprehending it.  What this apparently means is that somewhere, sometime in the very distant past, somebody decided that something someone else had written was so holy it could no longer be said. So this person, whoever they were, apparently has greater authority over a religious holy text, held by Judaism to be the holy words of their deity, than their deity himself?  Wow. Just, wow.

    Clause 3. “Theology. the crime of assuming to oneself the rights or qualities of God.”

    Since when is thought a crime? No, I’m not saying I think I have the rights or qualities of god, singular, I don’t. But I absolutely refuse to deny anyone, anywhere the right to think as they choose. If they choose to believe they are a god, or the only god, that is their business, not mine. You will note that in this section the words that are mine do not capitalize the word god.

    I want you to know why I don’t.

    It is because I just don’t know. I don’t know if there are gods, or if there is one overall god. I don’t really even know what a god is. From all the writings on that subject I do know what god is supposed to be, but I have a fundamental problem with all of those writings. My fundamental problem with them all, is that they are all written by men. No man is a god. Therefore since I don’t know who or what god is, of if god is singular or plural, or masculine or feminine, it seems impious of me to ascribe the word a capital letter that indicates reverence. What if the god to whom I ascribe that reverence turns out to be the wrong one, or what if they {plural}, turn out to not exist at all? So capitalizing the word  seems irreverent, which I am, so I don’t. Simple.

    Clause 4. “irreverent behavior toward anything held sacred, priceless, etc.”

    I said it before, but I have to say it again. From the sublime to the ridiculous. Now I’m not allowed to be irreverent toward something held to be priceless??? Would my describing the Mona Lisa as “just another portrait” be blasphemy?

    A three letter phrase commonly used in the texting internet era that begins with “o” and ends with “g” pops to mind. But I won’t use it. Why? Because, strangely enough, after all I’ve already written, I think that little acronym is offensive, crass, and rude.

    Why do I think that three letter acronym is offensive, crass, and rude? Because it implicitly ascribes special value to our personal deity. They are ours, and therefore they are special. I firmly believe in equality, which means that our deity cannot be of greater worth than that of anyone else.  I don’t care if your religious text proclaims it is the only “true” religious text, which most religious texts seem prone to doing. It isn’t. It is just another of many religious texts.

    Why did I bother writing this post?

    Because blasphemy is evil, but it isn’t evil in the way so many think. It is the proclamation that something is blasphemous which is evil, not the utterance itself. Why? Because such proclamations are nothing but weapons in the arsenal of those people who strive to control the way you think. Which is all they are. People. People, just like you and me. Who gives them authority to chain our thoughts so thoroughly we dare not even think?  It certainly isn’t a deity, oh no.  Indeed, if anyone gives them that authority, it is you, and you are free to take that authority away.

    The next time you listen to a cleric of any religion, bear this thought in mind. They were ordained by another human, and no human is a deity.

    I also wrote this post to show my reverence for the staff of the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine. If you are financially able, I encourage you to support them with a donation. Let free people everywhere show those who would quell free thinking an explicit message.  A message that we won’t be cowed into silence by violent extremist terrorists – regardless of what brutal deity supposedly demands it. I hold those murdered staff members in far higher esteem than the murderous villains who attacked them.

    Just to be clear… I consider every person who condones or promotes murder and oppression in any name to be an evil, inexcusable, waste of human skin who has no place in our world. Sadly, that definition encompasses an enormous number of Muslims, who actually seem to think people who abandon their faith should be executed. {Go ahead and verify that statement for yourself.}

    Here is a heads up. You actually think someone should be murdered for a change of heart? A change of heart doesn’t make them evil. The evil one is you, for ever considering murder as a punishment for freedom of thought.

    If you can’t question your clerics, then it is past time you questioned your faith.

    Blasphemy should not be something we fear, it should be something we encourage because it opens the mind to new thoughts, and those new thoughts are ours – they are not the bigoted dogma of some other human who claims to speak for god.

    If you hold Freedom of Speech, along with the requisite Freedom of Thought that precedes it in high esteem, then throw political correctness out into the stinking trash where it belongs. And while you’re at it throw out archaic, irrelevant words that curtail your freedom to think. One of those words, is blasphemy.

    {P.S. What do I really believe? I talk about truth, and I do so because truth really matters to me. But truth doesn’t define what I believe, what I believe is defined by truth as I perceive it. But that doesn’t answer the question, does it? It doesn’t say whether I’m a Theist, or an Atheist. What do I really believe? I’ll post more about that another time.}