
I'm going to ignore the odd strange glance as I sit here in my favourite coffee den that's just round the corner from where I live. I don't care if anyone sees me tapping my feet to the silent beats of Billy Idol's greatest hits that are pouring into my brain via a smart new set of near-invisible earphones.
I've got an urge to write something, even though I don't have anything to say yet. I so admire Giles Coren's columns in the UK Times - how he and people like him can knock out an easy few thousand words every week and make them interesting fills me with respect for proper writers and journalists. The trick is he knows that no-one really cares about his daily ablutions, or natty observations about the postman with the wonky glass-eye, so he writes about his life with the irreverence of a food critic checking out some new cocky restaurant - oh but wait, he really is a food critic, that explains everything!
But I can't be like him. I'm caught in the trap that whilst I don't expect or advise anyone to read my blogs (I do it because it's geekier than keeping a diary), I can't ignore that someone might, and I don't want to look like an utter pillock any more than I do already.
So, Saint Giles , patron saint of the flippant witty introspective, please hear my prayer. I'm just going to start typing and I'll let my keyboard take me wherever it wants.....like Blogging when blindfolded.....
Let's talk about religion. I used to believe in religion. I used to believe in God. I was brought up in an Anglican / Church of England society. I did the choirboy thing, the alter boy thing, the reading the lesson on Sunday thing, and the odd Christian retreat camping mini-break thing in the school holidays - yeah, we got through more than our fair share of folk guitars and tambourines back then.
I so wanted to believe, and I prayed every day. I read the bible cover to cover. I think I stuck with it at least until about University before I realised I was missing something, and could no longer keep going through the motions...
Now I don't believe. I have no beef with those who do, but it's just not for me anymore. It was getting so hard to prop up my childhood-era belief systems with my own emerging adult experience of life around me.
That leaves a whole bunch of challenges - a huge gap to be filled - all those awkward Why? questions that small children ask at the most inconvenient moments suddenly have to be re-opened for cross-examination again. Such as, If we and all the other the lifeforms on this planet merely exist for existence's sake without some higher power, then what's it all for? In the words of Basil Faulty, "What is the bloody point?"
This childish concept of being 'good' to offer up exaltations to or seek blessings from a divine creator makes sense to me no longer.
Looking around - both locally, and in the news, I see a load of decent and kind people who live modest, considerate, charitable, and worthy lives. My point is I'm sure they would behave like this whether they thought God existed or not. Nice people will be nice, because it's in their nature. My point is they don't need a religious belief system to make them be nice....
But look at the greedy, nasty scumbags out there. So many seem to justify their actions through one religion or another. So many well intentioned religions seem to get distorted by despots in order to manipulate, and justify blatantly inequitable behaviour. Just look at all the dictators, wars, genocides, and human rights violations - most have a religious dimension to them.
Also look at the poorest, most helpless people in the world. It breaks my heart to see reports of those thousands homeless and starving in Sudan. Those I saw being interviewed on television last week often mentioned God. Some believed that the famine was part of some overall plan from God that would work out in the end as long as they kept their faith. I would never criticise what anyone does to cope with periods of such extreme crisis, but I do wonder if those same people in better times might have done more to fight back against the corruption of their own leaders had they not been waiting for God to step in. For example, perhaps they'd have been less likely to put up with religion-based conflicts with neighbouring communities, if they themselves hadn't been so conditioned to accept what their leaders were saying had to be done in the name of a distorted religion.
So if nice people don't need God to be nice, and nasty people can't help using religion to advance their own greed, and hopeless people use it to cope but in a way that perhaps keeps them in a cycle of hopelessness, why wouldn't an all-seeing deity spot this and do something, like removing any traces of themselves from humanity?
No, to me it doesn't add up anymore. In my view, religion is a 100% human-made construct. In olden days it had it's place for sure - when there weren't any other theories to explain things like day and night, seasons, why some people get sick and others die young. But today we have science, logic, philosophy to shed at least some light on these conundrums.
Maybe, our forebears created religion to explain the unexplainable, so that daily life could function without the paralysing distraction of so many unanswerable questions. Pretty soon however, the smart and ambitious realised that control of religious doctrine was they key to controlling what the masses were allowed to think, feel, and do - it was, and still is, the most powerful political tool ever invented (followed closely by the invention of the written word).
I just don't get that even in countries today where standards of education can be so high and accommodate plenty of free-thinking, and quality of life is not that bad, why religion often still plays such a large part in how the countries are run, and how unsubstantiated beliefs are able to override rational thought of many a regular citizen.
So what does this mean to me and my life on this fine Saturday morning? It means I get to create my own sense of good and bad, right and wrong. I get to decide for myself what I want the legacy of my time on this planet to be. I no longer need to spend time waiting for God or fate to fix things by magic, nor do I feel personally cursed when bad things happen. It's quite liberating, like I've escaped my own belief-Matrix.
But I do feel a kind of spiritual loneliness - I miss the 'invisible hug' of having someone or something watch over me and those I love. I'm sad to accept that deceased loved-ones who used to be in my life can't be up in heaven waiting if a religious type of heaven doesn't exist. Instead I've opted to believe in a different kind of heaven - a legacy and continuity created by the ripples of the life we lead, and particularly how these are retained in in the memories and emotions of the people we knew. Maybe in a thousand years, the only shred of evidence that I ever even existed could be this miserable blog in some Martian's scrapbook of historic curiosities.
But it's a hard bargain to accept. I'm sitting here still in Shots getting a different type of strange glance now - not because of tapping feet and leaky earphones, but because of the tears rolling down my face, as I'm suddenly hit hard by the memories all the wonderful people who I still miss and love, but who are no longer around on this earth.
So, no time to loose. I'd better get on with making the most of every moment, and opportunity I can. Who knows in the years ahead my perspectives on this may change again. I am more than willing to accept that I may have got it all wrong, this is just where my keyboard & coffee took me this morning - and all it took was a blog and a metaphorical blindfold....
- Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
Location:Mosque St,,Singapore



