What matters more, and less
>> Sunday, March 5, 2017
GLIMPSES
By Jose Ma. Montelibano
By Jose Ma. Montelibano
Whether we like it or not, life respects rank. Everything is ranked, and
we live life according to how things are ranked. There are instances when we
have more options, when we actually have the time to do this or that, when
rankings are not so demanding. But there are the opposite, too, when the
rankings are forced, almost routine, when it seems we have no choice but to
keep on doing what we always do. In hindsight, in truth, our lives are led with
less freedom than we imagine, and really much more by simple habit.
Life is not just very personal, it also is very national. We have habits
as a person, and we have habits as a people – and these habits rule more of our
lives than our freedom. After all, our being human includes our being physical,
and our physicality can be a serious limitation. Life sums it up quite simple
with the saying, “We have to eat, you know.” This is a forced ranking, that we
have to take care of our physical needs first. To some, this is easy. To many
others, this is what life mostly is all about. When one is born poor in the
Philippines, survival is all that matters.
From the bottom of the totem pole, there is a long way to climb. The
bottom is not the lowest, it is the most important. Only by taking care of it
can the rest of the totem pole find opportunity for discovery. In other words,
if our physicality needs urgent attention, we can be disabled from pursuing
other interests. When we are hungry, when we are sick, all else matters little.
Yes, life can force us to rank things not as we like it but just as it is.
More than 70 years ago, an American psychologist, Abraham Maslow, put
out a theory that man’s life was predicated on a hierarchy of needs. This
hierarchy does not give man any leeway at the bottom because we are either
alive or we have nothing to talk about here. Maslow’s theory was not very
sophisticated but it was, and is, very meaningful in its simplicity. Many more
intricate intellectual works have come out since then but not to contradict,
only to refine. That is how sound and solid Maslow’s fundamental principles and
perspective are. Under another name, or under no name, Maslow saw how firmly we
follow how life ranks what matters more, and less.
I believe that the equivalent of what Maslow taught should be a required
subject matter in our educational curriculum. And its more sophisticated part,
its national application, a required understanding of all public officials,
elected or appointed. It seems that bad governance can be largely traced to the
fact that national priorities are not in sync with our personal hierarchy of
needs. When leadership at different levels forgets or confuses itself with what
matters more, or less, there will be forced consequences. How else will a
hierarchy of needs be respected and followed without attendant penalties for
its violations?
Why else would the Philippines, naturally blessed with a biodiversity
that is one of the most outstanding in the planet, not be one of the richest
economy as well? Why else would the people of the Philippines not have one of
the highest per capita income in the world? Because our natural resources, our
human resources, have not been applied to how life ranks the needs in our
lives, the consequences are obvious and painful. Tens of millions remain dirt
poor, half of them still experiencing hunger, and a large chunk of the
population have to suffer family separation just to get out of their most
horrible poverty. There is a horrible disconnect between what a country has and
what its people have. Some have called it the imbalance of wealth distribution.
I say it is more the imbalance of power when 1% can own more than 99%. I say it
is the continuing dominance of centralized power and the continuing struggle to
understand what freedom and democracy truly mean.
Before Abraham Maslow was Abraham Lincoln who said, “Nearly all men can
stand adversity, but if you want to test a man’s character, give him power.”
The persistent poverty of Filipinos is an indictment of power, and even the
proliferation of illegal drugs is one of its consequences. When we do not take
care of our own, then our own must find ways to take care to their needs, by
fight, by flight, or by paralysis. When the application of power does not
understand, or respect, man’s hierarchy of needs, the allocation of resources
will be serious imbalanced. And so will be the well-being of the great number
of victims to this serious imbalance.
Poverty hurts. Drugs hurt. The killings hurt, too, but so should the
unimaginable number of deaths that poverty has caused, the untimely, premature,
and unnecessary deaths from the sustained suffering of the poor. It seems many
are shocked when the killings are sudden and bloody, but less care when lives
are pre-terminated by hunger, malnutrition, sickness and the lack of other
basic needs. I have heard the outcry against drug-related killings and I
understand how killings go against the very grain of our humanity. If we match
that outcry with a louder one, against the inhumanity of poverty, against the
imbalance of power and resources, we create a louder voice and become a
stronger force for change.
Meanwhile, those who understand the principle of life and choose to
manipulate it for their own advantage, as many have done for millennia, will
continue to rule the world. Their names and faces change but their
methodologies persist through time. And human suffering, too. But a new page
has turned to give all of us blank spaces on which we will write new chapters
in our story. May courage and kindness matter more, and everything else less.
Read more: http://opinion.inquirer.net/100605/what-matters-more-and-less#ixzz4UvMWNdvF
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