Socrates
used to call the opinions of the many by the name of Lamiae—bugbears to
frighten children.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 11.23 (tr
Long)
As a
child, I was actually quite terrified of the bogeyman, in whatever form the
story was told. My Austrian family had a number of wonderfully frightening
versions, old traditions I sadly suspect will soon be lost to future
generations. They all had a certain moral lesson behind them, and could be
quite effective in scaring us away from all sorts of mischief.
My
favorite was “Der Wassermann”. Do you know that gurgling sound you hear when
water goes down the sink? That is the cry of the “Water Man”, who lurks in the
pipes of your house. Will he do you any harm? Only if you play around with
water carelessly, and then he will suck you down the drain.
“Das
Gankerl”, a sort of imp or goblin I suppose, would live inside all the mirrors
of the house. He was quite friendly, as long as you didn’t stare at yourself
vainly too often, at which point he’d drag you through the glass, never to be
heard from again. I swear to this day, after testing my luck once to often,
that I saw his face peering back at me in my parent’s bedroom.
The
Greeks had their Lamia. They say Hera cursed her to eat children, after she was
caught up in yet another one of Zeus’ many trysts. It became a fable to scare
children into behaving, and eventually also referred to a creature that seduced
young men who could not control their passions. Oh, and she apparently would
also eat them after the fact.
I at first
wonder how popular opinion could be like the bogeyman, but then a moment of
reflection shows me how it can be one of the most dangerous things of all, for
people both young and old. It is thoughtless, when we should be thoughtful. It
tempts us to be rash when we should be prudent. It appeals to everything base,
and neglects everything noble. It seduces us away from temperance.
I don’t
see this as any sort of snobbery, as some might, because the problem isn’t just
that many people may think this way, but rather that too many people simply
choose not to think for themselves at all. It is too easy to conform without
actual awareness, where the force of submission numbs our sense of personal
accountability.
Good
things might be popular, but things are hardly good because they are popular.
As soon as I am moved by the voice of the mob, I am no longer myself. I have
entered into a willing slavery, where I lower my eyes, shut off my mind, and
become no more than an animal in the herd. I should be more than that, better
than that.
Yes, I
may indeed then deserve to disappear into the sewers for my foolishness, or get
lost in the mirrors of my vanity. This is the sort of bogeyman I should truly
fear, ceasing to rule myself.
Written in 6/2009
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