By Jean M Boyd

Jean M Boyd - Author of this article
The rapists acted like animals – Homosapiens variety
We were all shocked when we learned of the brutal gang rape of a 15-year- old girl on school property, while other teens watched and took pictures; no one called the police. What can we make of all this? The only way to make sense of heinous acts such as this one is to – look in the mirror. When you do, looking back at you will be your own image. Look deeper and you will see the human nature that we all share.
At the deepest, most fundamental level of our human nature is something we share with all life forms on this planet – survival instincts. These instincts tell us how to find food, reproduce (sex), and compete to the death for survival of the fittest. We must credit our survival instincts with allowing our species to defeat all competition and dominant the planet. The reason these instincts are so effective is because they are not moral or immoral. They are amoral and underlie our potential to do evil. Psychologically, they manifest as wanting to control, which is the driving force underlying rape.
The rapists acted like animals – Homosapiens variety.
We find it easy to point the finger at a few individuals and wonder how people can commit such horrendous acts, such as gang rape. We don’t like to acknowledge that the actions of both rapists and spectators were not unusual. Nor can they be attributed to mental illness.
You might recall a time when, for years, rape, torture, and murder were the order of the day, and the perpetrators were – ordinary people. And who were the watchers who saw people being beaten in the streets, saw their neighbors being dragged away from their home, and moved into the now empty houses? Who were the French/Italian/ Hungarian policemen who rounded up the victims, and the Polish farmers who saw the skeletal victims peering through the barbed wire of concentration camps. Throughout Nazi occupied Europe, “normal” people, bakers, housewives, judges, and bankers participated, watched – and did nothing.
In America, the government watched and did nothing. In Italy, the Vatican watched and did nothing – except help Nazi war criminals escape to South America and pray for the Jews – to convert to Catholicism. Compared to the rape, torture and slaughter of millions, what’s’ one more rape? It’s not as though women and children are not raped every day America. As for the pictures the teenage spectators took of the rape, the Nazis took tens of thousands. Why should this rape matter? Poet John Donne:
Each man’s death diminishes me,
for I am involved in mankind.
Therefore, send not to know for whom the bell tolls.
It tolls for thee.
In letters to the editor about this gang rape, some people suggest that morals and compassion should be taught in the schools. However, morality and compassion cannot be taught; they emerge from within the individual. Our cultural indoctrination gives us a code of ethics, which tells us what is right and what is wrong. The problem is, as Shakespeare said: “It is neither good nor bad, but thinking makes it so.”
Slavery, burning people alive, and the subjugation of women, were once considered ethical by men who appointed themselves society’s moral arbiters – religious leaders. Not that long ago, the Catholic hierarchy judged it morally correct to protect child abusing priests. If we can’t trust the moral judgments of other people, if we consider “I was following orders” a moral cop out, whom can we trust? The answer is simple: look in the mirror.
When we look at our human nature in depth, we see that in addition to our amoral survival instincts, we have a higher potential, a level of psychological maturity Abraham Maslow called “self-actualization. ” Individual freedom, individual power, courageousness – and morality, are among the abilities that characterize this state. When we become self-actualized, we become moral animals, who can live in a society that finds torture, racism, theocracy, and environmental destruction “normal,” and decide for ourselves: “this is wrong.” If we don’t become self-actualized as part of the normal maturation process, our DNA s gives us a simple way to achieve this “enlightened,” state, which is really only the beginning of a mentally healthy, mature, adult consciousness.
When you bring your true self into being (self-actualization), when you look in the mirror, you would see a self image that is half dark and half light, reflecting your potential to do evil and your potential to do good. Paradoxically, only when you accept your potential to do evil do you access your higher potential and have the courage to bash a rapist over the head with a tree branch, call the police, and testify in court.
The problem is not that we have a dark side to our human nature, but not being aware of it. No matter how “enlightened” we become, from day to day, the best any of us can to is lean toward the good – which is all it takes to tip the balance.
Since childhood, Jean’s quest has been the search for knowledge, which is synonymous with power. Her intent is to empower individuals looking to jump start their psychological evolution and achieve higher consciousness. Her book, The Greatest Escape: Travel the Quantum Path to Personal Freedom, providers readers with the theory underlying two quantum personal growth techniques, which produce immediate results, without talking about problems. Plenty of colorful pictures enhance the learning and make the book fun to read. More information can be found at http://www.quantumboyd.com
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