For self development addicts.

Is Self-Definition Easier Today?

Maurits Cornelis Escher, ‘Tekenende handen’, 1948, lithografie.

In straight accordance with your age, you are now in a distinct phase of your life where you are redefining yourself. Self-definition is an ongoing process, for as long as you live. Our lives are subdued to a historical presence and an existential reality. The historical presence is also subdued to live in a comparative reality. In every time sequence of our lives, the comparative approach is remodeling our identity. And comparative approach is dependent on the cultural, social and historical context. This dependency is what creates the frames for us, mostly in how we can manage to define ourselves. This self-definition needs to be ever reassuring in order to keep our balance. We live now, so is the actual context in favour of this need for self-definition? With all the progress of the modern world, is it easier today to define ourselves?

Alejandro Jodorowsky, photo by Daniel Gonzalez Duenas

What actually started me to be preoccupied about this question was an interview a saw with Alejandro Jodorowsky. If you don’t know who this guy is, you should look around a little bit. The effort is worth it. His true art and expressiveness in all of his endeavours are extremely inspiring for all seekers of genuine self-transformation.

This interview is available here. I suggest you watch it all, for at least his unmistakable style. The part that is really pertaining to this topic starts at about 6:30. He is being asked about his ramifying artistic activities. His reply goes like this:

“Things have no definition now. Why should I have a definition?”

“… Because I’m an artist. I am not a zombie… In our civilization now we are becoming zombies. Doing only one thing, like a machine. But we are not in the old time… of the fixed telephone. We are in the time of the iPod. The telephone isn’t any more a telephone. [pulling out his mobile from his pocket] With that you can send messages, take photos, take pictures, listen music. What is that? What is the name of that? Is a telephone? Maybe not. If you use it like a telephone, is a telephone. If you use it like an e-mail, is another thing. If you use it to take a photography, is another thing. Things have no definition now. Why should I have a definition? …”

Being a fan of his movies (but not only), I consider him one of the very rare artists able to constantly actualize his visions, his message. And I guess, for that he needs to be able to constantly redefine himself.

His analogy with the mobile here, I find to be expressive for our present times, frames – social, cultural or historical. There are so many ways to express ourselves today, that maybe never were. But does this make it easier? Is it easier now to define ourselves?

If you consider blogging, – because this is what most of us are doing here, – this can be another way for self-definition. Blogging exposes our need to write about things we are interested in, for some or many of us even to write about ourselves. And this is not just a way for other people to find out about us, but a way for us to find out about ourselves. Why not, a way to help us defining ourselves, more or less consciously.

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Comments on "Is Self-Definition Easier Today?":

  1. teodora says:
    September 19th, 2007 at 1:16 pm

    Why would self-definition mean having a one-track mind? People always had many roles and activities and qualities at once. I don’t think technology makes any difference here. E.g. an egg can be a bird, an omlette, or a political statement.

  2. Attila Borcsa (author) says:
    September 19th, 2007 at 3:37 pm

    Whether I don’t get your point, or you don’t get mine. This post is by far not a statement. The example with the mobile was an analogy, as you yourself are trying to give one with the egg.

  3. teodora says:
    September 19th, 2007 at 4:45 pm

    My point (in reply to the quote above) was that the existence of multifunctional things are not new. The “things have no definition now” thing is not new either, it’s not derived from the ipod. So imo the question of self-definition is the same as in the past (in reply to “is it easier?”).

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