Not only is our lifestyle on back-order, so is our sanity.
Yesterday I mentioned our collective inability to make sense of the contradictory messages of the status quo and our own experience. This inability to reconcile completely contradictory messages generates psychosis, an internal breakdown that manifests as a disconnect from reality.
To take one example: we're constantly bombarded with the message that a four-year college diploma is the essential key to a secure middle-class lifestyle, yet our experience is that millions of college grads are living precariously, burdened by extremes of student loan debt.
Here's another I discussed yesterday: the status quo hypes the stock market's near-record highs as "proof" all is well and everything's getting back to "normal" but our experience is the real economy is in a stumbling free-fall.
And what is that "old normal" everyone is so anxious to return to anyway? How about
too busy to be healthy, too addicted to social media to have agency? Or as the writer of
Small Family Farms Aren't the Answer wrote:
"In short, we've done the most modern-American thing possible: bartered away our quality of life for the freedom to be miserable."
In other words, to keep us in thrall to an unsustainable status quo, what's been normalized and institutionalized is social psychosis, breakdown and burnout.
Laing explores the way our internalized interpretation of experience can be shaped to create uniform beliefs about our society and economy that then lead to norms of behavior that support the political/economic status quo.
"All those people who seek to control the behavior of large numbers of other people work on the experiences of those other people. Once people can be induced to experience a situation in a similar way, they can be expected to behave in similar ways. Induce people all to want the same thing, hate the same things, feel the same threat, then their behavior is already captive - you have acquired your consumers or your cannon-fodder."
For Laing, the politics of experience is not just about influencing social behavior; it has an individual, inner consequence as well:
"Our behavior is a function of our experience. We act according to the way we see things. If our experience is destroyed, our behavior will be destructive. If our experience is destroyed, we have lost our own selves."
One manifestation of this destruction is the shunting of systemic failure onto the individual. The system itself cannot be seen as a failure, so all failure must be pinned on the individual.
Those of you who have read
Survival+ will gain a new perspective on
opting out,
protected fiefdoms,
when belief in the system fades, profound political disunity,
plantation-like structures,
derealization,
radical self-reliance,
asymmetric stakes in the game,
induced amnesia and other ideas I have presented on the politics of experience over the years.
Contradictory political "necessities" are destroying our internal coherence, our social order and our economy. Not only is our lifestyle on back-order, so is our sanity.
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