essaysbysean.blogspot.com
…I believe Greece
right now is a nation of civilians, not citizens…
I will sneak up on
that idea with some paragraphs about addicts:
Here in Canada
it’s peacetime, of course; we’ve never declared war on drugs, and sometimes I think,
“Let’s be charitable: A Canadian businessman can’t help doing a little
marijuana, or some cocaine, or heroin or ecstasy.” Other times I feel a red rage
against businessmen who “can’t help themselves.” Don’t tell me I can’t
understand substance-losers. I’ve attended plenty of “recovery” from substance-addiction
groups. I’m mostly charitable towards others in recovery, mostly.
Those who embrace
recovery from, say, alcohol or debt—and yes, there are 12-step meetings for Debtors
Anonymous—always start in the same way: Admitting they have a problem. And
surrendering to this admission.
Surrender is a big
step. Psychiatrist M. Scott Peck, in his best selling sequel Further
Along The Road Less Traveled, tells of a man who claimed to understand “the 12 steps of recovery” after merely six months of Alcoholics Anonymous
meetings. (P. 140-141) The man claimed that step one, “being powerless,” meant it
was up to him to refrain from taking that first drink (as he was then powerless
to keep from drinking a second, third and forth drink, et cetera) He still had
the power, he believed, to not take the first drink. This although he had been
drinking throughout his six months of AA meetings: Obviously his power wasn’t
working. Peck said, “I guess I can’t help you then.” In Peck’s eyes, the man
had not surrendered: He refused to believe he was also powerless during the intervals
between having his drinks.
Which leads me to
Greece, and the year-long or decade or century-long interval before their next financial
crises. I am not sure the Greeks as a nation are ready to have the courage to
surrender into facing their faults. Naturally, we know states can change: The
Germans used to carry their inflated pay home in wheelbarrows, and scapegoat,
and believe in war. Now they have good banks and the most liberal refugee laws
in Europe.
The Greeks,
judging by radio interviews, seem to vaguely see that their current mess
started with “lies” from “corruption” by “them,” by fancy people in Athens far,
far away—and that’s their problem. You see, here in my home country of Canada,
famous for ice hockey, we have found we cannot have a fancy National Hockey
League without also having minor leagues, and a winter ice rink in every small
community. As I see it, the Greeks have no reason to magically hope leaders in
their national capital will somehow stop being corrupt and stop operating under
cover of darkness, not unless Greeks in every small community start being
willing to become transparent, responsible and non-corrupt.
But—dammit—Greeks
don’t seem to be waving the flag and beating the drum for a Great War Effort to
fix their national faults. Too bad. “Those who won’t own their history are
condemned to repeat it.” (From Santayana) Judging from my newspaper it is clear:
unlike tired reformed Nazis, Greeks still want glory and delusion.
'If only,' deluded Greeks
tell each other, 'we weren’t oppressed by Big X.' (fill in scapegoat of choice)
Greeks remind me of children who lose money or a toy. Children tell their
parents, “It got lost.” An adult says, “I lost it.”
An active citizen
asks, “What responsibility can I, can we, all take?” A passive civilian gets
twisted up and says, “We couldn’t help it. It’s not our fault. We can’t do
anything now. It’s all their fault.” Exactly
what an addict would say. Or a Greek. Call it victim mode.
Meanwhile, a little
woman in recovery is saying, “God grant me the serenity to change the things I
can.”
And what if the
Greeks exit the Euro dollar zone, and reprint their old currency, the drachma?
And what if things then get economically worse? Will they, then, stand like serene
adults saying, “OK, now things are worse, but at least we did what we thought
was right, as citizens in control of our economy”? If you know addicts like I
know addicts, then you know: The Greeks will just angrily shout, “Things are
worse now because of Big X!” Victim mode.
I believe the
Greeks, despite the crises, are not ready yet, not even ready to say “our”
crises. Just as the Germans while taking inflated money home in wheelbarrows, and experiencing
the hellish horrors of war, were not ready: Only losing a war made them ready
to change.
Canada was right
not to join the west in trying to bail out the Greeks: It’s time to let them seek
their own destiny.
Sean Crawford
Calgary
July 2015
Footnotes:
~I hope you don’t
think I’m avoiding reality too much, but I must confess: I’m typing this off
when I could be working on my manuscript.
~I’ve learned from
a debt book by Jerry Mundis that other cities (not Calgary) have meetings of
Debtors Anonymous. Very informative. It seems you’re allowed to have a life
while still paying off a debt, or still writing a manuscript, or still
decluttering. It’s OK to be happy—who knew?
(Actually, self-made
millionaire Paul Graham knew. Graham, my favorite web essayist, puts “remember
to be happy” on his brief To Do list, ever since reading the findings of a
palliative care nurse. His brief essay is linked here)
~Maybe I’m wrong
about Greece, I’m no geography expert; in fact, I doubled my knowledge of Greece
by reading the first chapter of that popular book by fiscal expert Michael
Lewis, Boomerang: Travels in the New
Third World, the one where the cover shows George Washington with a black
eye. Lewis went around talking to ordinary Greeks. Very informative.
~I’m no addictions
expert. I can say I’ve done both a
“walk through” and a “work through” of the 12 steps of recovery. (The former
was because my peers were ready to do the steps, and I did what I could
alongside them) Please don’t worry about me; I’m clean and sober.
~I’ve often blogged
here of my humble awe before one of my favorite epics, The War Against the Chtorr,
by David Gerrold. No doubt Gerrold had fought his own demons before he was able
to imagine the Chtorr, and a young adult growing to be a hero. Long before
spaceships or flying machines, Americans knew that context, “birds of a feather
flock together,” matters. For the hero’s growth, it truly matters that losing
the war with Russia and the resulting Moscow Treaty, some years ago, had
humbled the high-ranking adults around him.
In my version: In Book
One the young hero, after being conscripted, is sent to the United Nations. There
he observes some very angry U.N. delegates. He walks over to some fellow
soldiers. Glancing over at the delegates, some veterans rub the young man’s
nose into the fact some people would prefer
to die before admitting they are wrong.
So if very angry
Greeks have preposterous views, not admitting to facts so obvious to us over
here, well, they haven’t psychologically “hit bottom” yet. High unemployment is
not the same as an economy that is hanging dead, dead, dead.
~Any books I’ve
mentioned above should be easy to search for, so no links to them: I am following
my “no links” general policy, (archived July 2012) but here’s a link I found
during the week as I was waiting to do my Thursday blog post. The comments to the piece have further links.
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