I've been thinking about Ann's post and some of the replies. And about
myself and the SGI. A lot, since reading here yesterday. I speak only from
my own experience and don't claim to know everything, so I'm sure some of
you have other experiences and will disagree. These are my own
observatons. I am taking a risk and kind of baring my soul here -- I know,
a stupid thing to do -- but I really feel the need to say this. If you
flame me, I'll ignore you, but I wouldn't be opposed to discussion.
Some people perhaps don't receive the love and attention and emotional
support they need in life, particularly in early life when it is most
important. It is those people who, without resolving certain issues, tend
to spend their lives looking for somebody to fill the gap. They constantly
seek happiness and fulfillment outside of themselves and of course they
are never satisfied because you can't get that from outside, or from
anybody else but yourself. But they don't know that, or they don't want
to, because that's kind of a painful and hard thing to face.
So they live off of others' energy and become dependent on others for
their happiness. What happens when somebody like this encounters something
like NSA? Their need to be dependent can be fulfilled, depending on the
members and leaders they encounter. Because of the person's past, and
because some NSA leaders were not prepared to deal with such a thing --
remember, they did not ASK for this person to become dependent on them --
an unhealthy relationship could occur. It's not the organization's "fault"
anymore than it is the person's. It's karma, it's cause and effect. It's
co-dependency.
I think that's more how things used to be. (And even SGI members might
disagree with me on this point, I don't know.) I don't doubt people's
negative experiences that I read here, but I don't blame the organization
for them, either. The organization was only made up of people, after all.
The degree of responsibility we allowed others to have for our lives was
solely up to US.
What I see in the organization now is different. I tend to instinctively
want to be one of those people who would like to depend on others for my
happiness, on some level. (Then again, on another I am fiercely
independent and rebellious.) I am just now in the process of learning that
whatever emotional support I didn't receive when I was younger cannot be
obtained from others now -- not just in the SGI, but anywhere. There is no
substitute. That is a way, way hard thing to learn and accept. Sometimes I
find myself wanting to depend on others more than I want to admit. And
boy, isn't the SGI just a wonderful place full of wonderful people just
waiting to be nice to me. But you know what? They don't let me be
dependent on them. They do not let me. This is one of the major ways in
which I have seen the SGI change. Or maybe it didn't; maybe I just did. My
point is, the organization is not responsible for us. We are.
Anyway, when you see me ranting and raving here about taking
responsibility for yourselves, stop blaming others, and get on with your
lives, this is why! What good does it do to blame? It is about karma, not
fault.
An allegory for example: imagine Child A and Child B are abused by a
parent. Child A grows up hating his parent, blaming his parent for hurting
him, for making him hate himself, for ruining his life. Child A lives all
of his life like this -- blaming and angry and unhappy. Child B, on the
other hand, recognizes that what his parent did was wrong, but instead of
allowing it to ruin his life and make him unhappy, overcomes it all
through therapy or chanting or whatever, and is able to learn, grow, do
human revolution, and create a happy, productive, and meaningful life.
This does not in any way excuse the actions of the parent; it simply frees
Child B from suffering.
I don't know, maybe I'm just talking to a stone wall. I just don't
understand the blame game or living in the past.
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