Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Complicity or Contrariness?

There is a quote from Wendell Berry in the forward to Bill Coperthwaite's book The Handmade Life: In Search of Simplicity that strikes me. It goes to the core of what I think it means to live by one's values.

To make public protests against an evil, and yet live dependent on and in support of that way of life that is the source of the evil, is an obvious contradiction and a dangerous one. If one disagrees with the nomadism and violence of our society, then one is under an obligation to take up some permanent dwelling place and cultivate the possibility of peace and harmlessness in it. If one deplores the destructiveness and wastefulness of the economy, then one is under an obligation to live as far out on the margin of the economy as one is able: to be as economically independent of exploitative industries, to learn to need less, to waste less, to make things last, to give up meaningless luxuries, to understand and resist the language of salesmen and public relations experts, to see through attractive packages, to refuse to purchase fashion or glamour or prestige. If one feels endangered by meaninglessness, then one is under an obligation to refuse meaningless pleasure and to resist meaningless work, and to give up the moral comfort and excuses of the mentality of specialization.
(from The Long-Legged House, page 89)

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