Did Walker Percy Really Write the Last Self-Help Book?
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by
Peter
Lawler
February
24, 2013, 9:20 AM
So
lots of readers (about six) have written ME asking for advice on what book they
should read to turn their lives around.
Here's
my recommendation: Lost in the Cosmos by the
philosopher-physician-novelist Walker Percy. It was published in 1983,
and I'm one of the very few Americans celebrating the book's 30th anniversary.
Several posts will be required to lay out even the basics about being
lost in the cosmos. This, of course, is the first.
Percy’s
Lost in the Cosmos is subtitled “The Last Self-Book.” He said he
gave the book that title so that it would end up in the self-help section of
bookstores. And it did.
From
Percy’s view, our bookstores are mostly filled with two kinds of
books—self-help books and diverting or entertaining books about scandal-ridden
law firms or extraterrestrials or VAMPIRES or a bunch of sexually
obsessive shades of grey. Diversions, of course, get your mind off
yourself, relieve your stress, help out in alleviating your fears, your
anxieties, your boredom. According to Pascal, most of our lives are
diversions, escapes from what we really know, evidence of our misery without
God. According to Percy, most of our lives these days are diversions that
become progressively more disappointing. The pursuit of happiness has
become the pursuit of diversion in the midst of prosperity. And one
problem among many about living in our highly self-conscious time is that
diversions we know are merely diversions are boring or only very weak and
evaporating antidotes to despair. That’s why Percy knew people visiting
museums are mostly ineffectively fending off despondency. That’s also why
highly educated bourgeois Americans today try so hard and fail so miserably in
being bohemians too.
Percy
adds that the self-help books are diversions too. They claim to use the
latest studies to tell us who we are and what we’re supposed to do. They
tell us that we need, say, seven habits to be highly effective, to be
productive, to satisfy our basically material needs. We are, like the other
animals, organisms in environments, and we can be happy if we’re think for
ourselves, listen to the experts, stay safe or avoid all the risk factors, are
rich, and have effective interpersonal dynamics. But lots of us, Percy
observes, faithfully follow the self-help advice and end up feeling more
disoriented or displaced or more empty than ever. All the self-help experts can
add is to stay busy (but with stress-relieving periods of recreation) and
positive so eventually things will turn around for you.
So
the self-help books work well for a while but eventually fail, as all
diversions do. They claim to but do not really tell us who we are and
what we’re supposed to do. They can’t extinguish the experiences of
self-consciousness or the self or soul by denying that what’s distinctively
human about each of us really exists. They can’t take out what the
existentialists, such as the philosopher Heidegger, truthfully describe.
We’re not organisms in an environment, and so we can’t really lose ourselves—our
personal identities—in some environment, in some COSMOS in which each of us is
merely a part. We can’t lose BEING LOST. That’s why the master
psychologist Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn heard just beneath the surface of all our
happy-talk pragmatism the howl of existentialism.
For
Percy, the resulting ANXIETY—the experience of being an inexplicable or absurd
leftover in the world the EXPERTS describe—ought to be a prelude to WONDER
about how strange the human self or soul is. But for the experts, anxiety
that has no environmental cause (such as being isolated from the other social
animals) must have a physical or chemical cause. So there must be a
physical or chemical remedy—a mood-altering or mood-elevating drug. As
Percy explains, for our experts psyche-iatry—discovering who we are and what
we’re supposed to do through attentive conversation—is replaced by a kind of
chemo-therapy. For Percy, Socrates and Freud were old-fashioned doctors of the
soul; the expert objection to their approach is that was time-consuming
and expensive and the results uncertain or unreliable. Who cares about
the so-called REAL CAUSE if we can effectively manage the SYMPTOMS?
Why shouldn’t we CHOOSE the moods that make us upbeat and productive?
Self-consciousness
doesn’t become the enemy, but something to be controlled or managed through
technology. But the truth is that even the drugs or chemo-therapy don’t
work better than diversions. It’s easy to zap self-consciousness out of
existence, but that would make the zappers the masters and the zapped the
slaves. The zappers, as a result, would be more miserably lonely than
ever. And, in our irrational pride and our love, we don’t really want to
surrender our personal identities. We want to be able to manage our
self-consciousness the way we can techno-control everything else. But our
experts don’t really know what engineered mood or judicious mixture of moods
would really make us happy or at home. It turns out that our moods—the
moods we’ve been given by nature—are indispensable clues to the truth about who
we are and what we’re supposed to do. That’s why Percy says, against the
cheomotherapists, that he has a right to his anxiety. It’s his right to
liberty that might lead to real truth and real happiness.
The
other self-help books can’t tell each of us why we have that right, because
they don’t even admit each of us is invincibly LOST IN THE COSMOS without help
we can’t possibly provide for ourselves. We’re born to trouble as the
sparks fly upward. Our alienation doesn’t have an environmental or
physical or political or Historical cause; it's part of and caused by our
self-consciousness or personal identity. It’s at the core of our REAL
psychology.
So
every self-help book has been a failure until Percy’s. His is the first
truthful and effective self-help book. For that reason, it’s also the
last self-help book. Percy explains, quite scientifically, why each of us
is homeless, and, by so doing, he helps us be at home with our homelessness,
and so free to be as at home as we can be with the good things of this
world.
Stay
tuned. There's a lot more to come.
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