Last weekend, Jon Stewart’s Rally to Restore Sanity drew millions of
participants in cities all over the world while Stewart himself, led
the effort in Washington DC with a few hundred thousand in attendance,
asking everyone to “take it down a notch for America.”  He did so with
the hope for an end to the partisan bickering and oppositional
rhetoric that prevents collaboration necessary for the efficacy and
success of the nation.

Stewart’s colleague, Steven Colbert, provided the counterpoint with
his “Rally to Restore Fear,” providing the comic (if not juvenile)
relief.  Stewart’s closing remarks were a plea for prevailing sanity:
“This was not a rally to ridicule people of faith or people of
activism or to look down our noses at the heartland or passionate
argument or to suggest that times are not difficult and that we have
nothing to fear.  They are and we do.  But we live now in hard times,
not end times.  And we can have animus and not be enemies. .. If we
amplify everything we hear nothing. “

Fear is the core issue behind violence, jealousy, bigotry, anger,
depression, greed, hatred, lies, insecurity or obsessive worry, just
to name a few. When fear is managed it is a vital, effective life
saving response which is critical to self preservation.  It is vitally
important to discern what appropriate and inappropriate fear is, as
well managed fear can and will protect us, and unmanaged fear can
destroy us.

What is our tendency to seek experience that amplifies our emotion,
especially fear?  Why do we keep feeding this tendency while knowing
that it takes us beyond the parameters of sanity?

Sociologist  Tim Hallett of Indiana University  asks: “How does an
inkling of anger develop into a blind rage?  How does a little
happiness evolve into bliss?...I argue that interaction serves both as
a stimulus to evoke emotional responses, and as a conduit for
emotional feedback and amplification. ” Emotional interactions left
unmanaged seek the further interaction needed for further arousal and
emotional amplification.  What becomes unmanaged emotion blinds us
from possibility, and takes us beyond sane mental states.  In the
words of Jon Stewart, “Sanity will always be and has always been in
the eye of the beholder.  To see you here today and the kind of people
that you are has restored mine.  Thank you."

Why do we succumb to self seeking insanity?  How do we resolve the
conflicting, amplified emotions within us to restore sanity?

What do YOU think?

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