Monday, June 20, 2011

Out of the Cocoon (9/28/09)

Last night I went to the ESWA Labor Class which is given there on Sunday afternoons. I left the TV with Tiger Woods driving for the golf championship, the Red Sox driving to avoid a sweep by their dreaded baseball rivals, theYankees, and the Patriots driving to get off the snide and their first win of the football season. Instead I found myself driving to Dorchester. And it felt so good! I am a sports fan. I root for the home team. But ESWA has awakened in me something so basic and profound it is as if I have come out of a deep sedation. Whether it is channel surfing on TV, web browsing on the computer, texting in wireless chat-rooms, or reading the local newspapers before I got the call from ESWA I was numbing myself into a cocoon with outside stimulation. Awake is good. Awake is realizing that throughout history progress has been made on the blood, sweat and tears of the working poor. Awake is understanding you are perpetuating it if you are not organizing to reverse this injustice.


Now-a-days everywhere you look their are "self-improvement" trainings, "self-actualization" seminars and "leadership" symposiums. People are encouraged to hand over their hard earned dollars for the "valuable information" these how to operations tell you they are ready to impart. However, when you stop to think about it, how actualized can you become as long as everybody is not able to afford these programs. Even if you could improve yourself, what value would it have when the mass of your country-folk are still caught up in the struggle just to keep themselves and their families alive? I have witnessed many would-be volunteers, myself included, coming through the doors of ESWA with low to middling stages of self-awareness, paying nothing but their time and energy, only to find themselves in the various opportunities of social action provided them by the association.

It serves the powers that be for as many people as possible to be isolated in individual cocoons. Of course the working poor do not have the luxury of numbing themselves to sleep in harmless ways which is why drugs are so prevalent in their sector of society. People say there was a man who said, "religion is the opium of the people." Personally I think he is misquoted. He must have said "opium is the opium of the people." This is just my opinion but if the government really wants to wage a war on drugs all it has to do is protect the rights of the working poor instead of perpetrating policies that allow the business community to drain their resources on a daily basis.

It is time for everybody in all economic sectors to put away the instruments of self-destruction. Whether it is an MP3 player or a needle our cocoons have served their purpose long enough. It is time to wake up. It is time to become conscious of the terrible injustice going on right here in the most affluent nation of all time. Together we can make it right, and only together. Awake is good.

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