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As I mud­dle along on the jour­ney through nascent mid­dle age, I find myself reg­u­lar­ly reassess­ing the pecu­liar habits of mind, pat­terns of per­son­al hum­bug, and the hob­gob­lins that nee­dle me at the utter­most edges of consciousness.

I dis­claim from the out­set that I have nev­er been accused of being cheer­ful in my think­ing. You have been warned.

We are social crea­tures, of course, and so there is always some lev­el of self-cen­sor­ship, some mod­icum of hypocrisy that punc­tu­ates our behav­iors and inter­ac­tions, whether we are ful­ly aware of it or not.

Hyp­ocrite at its root means to to play a part, to sift through our inner stores and give answer to anoth­er thes­pi­an upon the stage. It has always struck me as amus­ing that we reli­ably assume that every­one else is hyp­o­crit­i­cal, while ignor­ing that we are almost all hyp­ocrites of some vari­ety. All of us play­ers upon the stage, deliv­er­ing the lines we have learned by rote, com­port­ing our­selves as expec­ta­tion has dictated.

Our lives are not infre­quent­ly a van­i­ty fair, “a very vain, wicked, fool­ish place, full of all sorts of hum­bugs and false­ness­es and pretensions.”

And, yet, we per­sist in believ­ing that at least we — and the most belovèd of our friends and rela­tions — are free from false­ness, from pre­ten­sion, from the decep­tions of a mind that inclines man­i­cal­ly toward deceiv­ing itself above all else.

As Thackarey smart­ly and sar­cas­ti­cal­ly puts it, the best advice for life is to,

Be shy of lov­ing frankly; nev­er tell all you feel, or (a bet­ter way still), feel very lit­tle. See the con­se­quences of being pre­ma­ture­ly hon­est and con­fid­ing, and mis­trust your­selves and every­body… At any rate, nev­er have any feel­ings which may make you uncom­fort­able, or make any promis­es which you can­not at any required moment com­mand and with­draw. That is the way to get on, and be respect­ed, and have a vir­tu­ous character… 

Bet­ter yet is to dis­be­lieve that this is, in fact, what you are doing.

Believe of your­self that you love art­less­ly, that you tell all you feel, that you are hon­est and con­fid­ing, trust­ing to a fault, com­fort­able with all things, and good for your assur­ances. Believe these deceits strong­ly enough and you can, with­out qualm or com­plaint, believe in your own respectabil­i­ty and virtue.

And then when the world sinks its teeth in, when peo­ple talk about “each oth­ers’ hous­es, and char­ac­ters, and fam­i­lies — just as the Jone­ses do about the Smiths,” believe that you are fault­less, gen­uine, unen­cum­bered by such hum­bugs; safe from their scruti­ny, that the per­il is always some­one else’s peril.

We shrink from dis­ap­proval and cas­ti­ga­tion, prun­ing away at the parts of our­selves that we wor­ry are deformed, inde­cent, or too eas­i­ly mis­un­der­stood. We ply and shape the clay of our masks every­day with lit­tle snips and cen­sor­ships. And what’s more, we hard­ly even real­ize that this is what we are doing.

We have almost entire­ly aban­doned the lex­i­con of shame, guilt, and all of their social atten­dants; and so we plod through a chore­og­ra­phy we no longer believe exists but which has nev­er released its thrall upon us.

We are all sub­jects of the peo­ple from whom we seek approval and inclu­sion. The social groups to whom we con­form have nar­rowed, they have become small­er and more par­tic­u­lar and, dare I say, more vicious, but we sub­ject our­selves to them and their opin­ions, natheless.

And when we are found to be out of sorts with one or anoth­er, we are inevitably the recip­i­ents of accu­sa­tions of inau­then­tic­i­ty and hypocrisy — the car­di­nal sins of a world that can­not acknowl­edge its stage­craft and scripting.

Or, self-defen­sive­ly, we wield those accu­sa­tions against oth­ers who draw atten­tion by their mis­steps to our own hid­den faults.

Before a man goes to the dev­il him­self, he sends plen­ty of oth­er souls thither. 

We wish to be bet­ter than we are, we hope to be respect­ed more than we deserve, and we ache to avoid what­ev­er hell­fires might singe us; — even if it means throw­ing oth­ers to the flames.

John­son wrote rather sage­ly on the sub­ject of hypocrisy,

It is not dif­fi­cult to con­ceive, how­ev­er, that for many rea­sons a man writes much bet­ter than he lives. For, with­out enter­ing into refined spec­u­la­tions, it may be shown much eas­i­er to design than to per­form. A man pro­pos­es his schemes of life in a state of abstrac­tion and dis­en­gage­ment, exempt from the entice­ments of hope, the solic­i­ta­tions of affec­tion, the impor­tu­ni­ties of appetite, or the depres­sions of fear, and is in the same state with him that teach­es upon land the art of nav­i­ga­tion, to whom the sea is always smooth, and the wind always prosperous… 

It is easy to design. It is easy to say a thing, to pur­pose to do a thing; and then to ulti­mate­ly fail in the deed itself — beset as we are by the vicis­si­tudes of chance and circumstance.

We erect vast walls of prin­ci­ple and pre­cept, tow­er­ing para­pets of fine­ly honed iden­ti­ty; dark­some enclo­sures of self-descrip­tion with­in which we hide, pro­tect­ing our­selves from the judg­ments of oth­ers. We often believe in these edi­fices with our whole hearts, with all our zeal, with every last fiber of being we can muster.

Just the same, the stones will fre­quent­ly spall and crum­ble and the mor­tar more often than not dis­in­te­grates, a gim­crack mix of lit­tle more than mud and straw; we are nev­er quite as good as we wish we were, nev­er quite as con­stant as our designs would suggest.

Our stur­di­est seem­ing façades have a way of tum­bling down and expos­ing us at our most vul­ner­a­ble; and the world and its votaries do what the world and its votaries do: flood in through every breach and con­sume us.

We are, there­fore, not to won­der that most fail, amidst tumult and snares and dan­ger, in the obser­vance of those pre­cepts, which they laid down in soli­tude, safe­ty, and tran­quil­i­ty, with a mind unbi­ased, and with lib­er­ty unobstructed… 

It is no won­der — no won­der at all — that most fail, that most of us are at some point revealed to be hyp­ocrites of a kind. We under­stand this intel­lec­tu­al­ly, but do we choose to employ the knowl­edge just­ly or with wis­dom? Almost nev­er. Instead, we try des­per­ate­ly to main­tain our fic­tions and open­ly pick apart the fic­tions of others.

Noth­ing is more unjust, how­ev­er com­mon, than to charge with hypocrisy him that express­es zeal for those virtues which he neglects to prac­tice; since he may be sin­cere­ly con­vinced of the advan­tages of con­quer­ing his pas­sions, with­out hav­ing yet obtained the victory. 

It is the com­mon­ness of inter­per­son­al injus­tice, the kind of inju­di­cious­ness which marks our insult-ready and rep­u­ta­tion-demol­ish­ing cul­ture; that inter­cepts the bet­ter impuls­es of our nature and snuffs them out; that enkin­dles instead a rel­ish for another’s fail­ure if it means that atten­tion is divert­ed from our own.

How­ev­er sin­cere­ly con­vinced we are of being our best, almost none of us have obtained the vic­to­ry; and we are always a thin par­ti­tion from the pos­si­bil­i­ties of calami­ty and defeat.

It is not uncom­mon to charge the dif­fer­ence between promise and per­for­mance, between pro­fes­sion and real­i­ty, upon deep design and stud­ied deceit… 

Ah, but although we design, our designs are rarely deep and although we deceive our deceits are rarely stud­ied. Men­dac­i­ty is, frankly, quite uncom­mon; where our native incom­pe­tence and lim­it­ed­ness is legion. We promise and we pro­fess, but rarely do we per­form half so well as we would have wished.

We are hyp­ocrites in the strictest sense, “but the truth is, that there is very lit­tle hypocrisy in the world…” There is very lit­tle real hypocrisy, that is, very lit­tle inten­tion­al hypocrisy, very lit­tle hypocrisy moti­vat­ed by con­scious desire and mal­ice. The truth is,

… [W]e resolve to do right, we hope to keep our res­o­lu­tions, we declare them to con­firm our own hope, and fix our own incon­stan­cy by call­ing wit­ness­es of our actions; but at last habit pre­vails, and those whom we invit­ed to our tri­umph laugh at our defeat… 

And it is in their laugh­ter and by our shame, that we shrink and we grow vicious. We lash out most in our failure.

I sup­pose that it is here that we must land and try to wring some kind of res­o­lu­tion out of these admis­sions. We are a peo­ple that can­not sim­ply live with the facts, we must always endeav­or to tran­scend our unavoid­able lim­it­ed­ness and tack­le the prob­lem until a solu­tion emerges.

Let us decline then into the sort of con­fes­sion­al lit­er­a­ture that our soci­ety has come to expect, let us mine our souls and com­bine our extrac­tions into a con­crete slur­ry, let­ting it cure under the heat of the madding crowd, an ossi­fied mon­u­ment of the tow­er­ing hum­bug we feign to — nay, believe we— subvert.

I have spent the bet­ter part of two decades pur­su­ing a tack of forth­right­ness and appar­ent vul­ner­a­bil­i­ty, that if noth­ing was told in the dark­ness, then noth­ing could be spo­ken in the light, “[f]or there is noth­ing cov­ered, that shall not be revealed; and hid, that shall not be known.” 

If you have no secrets, then no secrets can be weaponized and wield­ed against you, right? 

But the truth is, it’s all bull­shit; it’s all just anoth­er lay­er of the façade, lay­ers all the way down to noth­ing; in this case a lay­er which deflects away from the things we tru­ly fear reveal­ing about our­selves by using hon­esty and open­ness as a shield.

I have con­fessed to any num­ber of fail­ures, errors, mis­judg­ments, and unat­trac­tive qualities:

To being vain and acquis­i­tive, to being quar­rel­some and dis­trust­ful; to being entire­ly too las­civ­i­ous in mind and inclined toward a lib­er­tin­ism that I must active­ly restrain; to being con­temp­tu­ous and intol­er­ant of so many of our civilization’s under-exam­ined con­ven­tions; to suf­fer­ing from melan­choly and the impuls­es to self-dis­so­lu­tion; to being dis­dain­ful of cre­den­tials over out­comes; to hav­ing van­ish­ing­ly lit­tle time or care for our most fre­quent the­o­log­i­cal, philo­soph­i­cal, and social preoccupations.

These are all true, as true as they can pos­si­bly be, but are also omissive.

They leave out that beneath the van­i­ty there is dis­sat­is­fac­tion with myself and fear that I am ugly and unlik­able; beneath the acquis­i­tive­ness is a fear of depen­den­cy and reliance upon others.

Beneath the quar­rel­some­ness is an abid­ing sense that I am worth­less, halfwit­ted, and unable to deliv­er on my promis­es and so I must be defen­sive and on guard to pro­tect what I know I don’t deserve.

Beneath the las­civ­i­ous­ness and lib­er­tin­ism is the unspo­ken real­i­ty that while I am as weak as any­one, I am also aston­ish­ing­ly vanil­la; that what I find most cov­etable is not my neighbor’s wife or my neighbor’s ass, but prod­ding the crevices of human beings’ most untram­meled impuls­es, turn­ing them over abstract­ly and unarous­ing­ly in my mind, and rarely enter­tain­ing them very deeply myself.

The depres­sion, or the attempts at and thoughts of sui­cide? Peri­od­ic, infre­quent, and rarely acute any­more. I’ve been unusu­al­ly con­tent — despite my lack­lus­ter self-assess­ment — for long enough that men­tal strug­gles and trau­mas of ear­li­er days bare­ly even make less of an impres­sion upon me, exert far less influ­ence over me.

And yet, trau­ma is now cur­ren­cy and with­out it you lack pre­cise­ly the resources nec­es­sary with­in the zeit­geist to war­rant con­sid­er­a­tion. And, so, how­ev­er untrou­bled I may now be by past expe­ri­ences, they have become the fluff which couch­es any­thing that I wish to say with authority.

Yes, author­i­ty. The very cre­den­tials which I abhor, the mea­sur­able out­comes I pre­fer? Well, I take full advan­tage of that with which cre­den­tials have priv­i­leged me, whether they’re on record or they are more intan­gi­ble. And past out­comes become a form of qual­i­fi­er that is inevitably used to insure future out­comes against doubt and criticism.

Not wast­ing time with or car­ing about pop­u­lar pre­oc­cu­pa­tions? These are not infre­quent­ly based in a lack of con­fi­dence that I have any­thing cogent to say or an over­whelm­ing cyn­i­cism that noth­ing can be done to resolve them.

But, lo, even these rev­e­la­tions betray some lev­el of omission.

How deeply strat­i­fied is the bull­shit of which we are almost entire­ly con­struct­ed? How pro­found is the native hypocrisy, the lit­tle con­ceal­ments, the lay­ers of decep­tion? Who knows? I know a lit­tle, but I daren’t pre­tend I’ve seen the bot­tle of my own barrel.

If we have gained some aware­ness of them, we are there­after for­ev­er exer­cis­ing judg­ment over these self- rev­e­la­tions and con­ceal­ments. I am quite sure at this late junc­ture, that the sin­gle great­est form of such judg­ment is prudence.

Pru­dence takes many forms. It can appear, as it is con­ven­tion­al­ly under­stood, in hes­i­tan­cy to speak or reveal more than is nec­es­sary. To be cau­tious, as it were; although I tend to think that this lacks pre­cise­ly the fore­sight implied by the word. Bet­ter? It can man­i­fest itself in pre­cise­ly the oppo­site. One can exer­cise an enor­mous amount of pru­dence by speak­ing with lit­tle hes­i­tan­cy, reveal­ing far more than is nec­es­sary; and in so doing, ulti­mate­ly leav­ing so lit­tle to the imag­i­na­tion that there’s hard­ly any­thing for ears to hear and shout from the rooftops, that has not already been heard and spo­ken in the streets.

And why be so pru­dent? Why accept that we are hyp­ocrites to some degree and mea­sure out our lives in cof­fee spoons? Acknowl­edge that we are all con­ceal­ers of some lev­el of non­sense? And that whether our masks are trans­par­ent veils or opaque palls, we must fre­quent­ly choose how it is that we present ourselves?

Well, as John­son puts it,

[t]he great end of pru­dence is to give cheer­ful­ness to those hours which splen­dour can­not gild, and accla­ma­tion can­not exhil­a­rate; those soft inter­vals of unbend­ed amuse­ment, in which a man shrinks to his nat­ur­al dimen­sions, and throws aside the orna­ments or dis­guis­es which he feels in pri­va­cy to be use­less incum­brances, and to lose all effect when they become famil­iar. To be hap­py at home is the ulti­mate result of all ambi­tion, the end to which every enter­prise and labour tends, and of which every desire prompts the prosecution. 

To be hap­py at home is often the ulti­mate busi­ness of van­i­ty fair, hav­ing nav­i­gat­ed all of the capri­cious expec­ta­tions out­side, hav­ing secured the resources nec­es­sary to main­tain it, hav­ing avoid­ed the allures of splen­dors and accla­ma­tions that dis­tract and endanger…

When we are final­ly shrunk down, the gross­est orna­ments stripped away, to some­thing near our real pro­por­tions, it is the pos­si­bil­i­ties there­in for which we tru­ly pine. The calm, the accep­tance, the secu­ri­ty, the hope that we might tra­verse anoth­er day unmo­lest­ed, until we reach our last.

It is sel­dom that we find either men or places such as we expect them… Yet it is nec­es­sary to hope, though hope should always be delud­ed, for hope itself is hap­pi­ness, and its frus­tra­tions, how­ev­er fre­quent, are yet less dread­ful than its extinction. 

We are all hyp­ocrites, we are all hum­bugs, we are all false­ness­es and pre­ten­sions, vain and wicked crea­tures, large­ly because we so hope. Because we hope to be loved, to be val­ued, to be under­stood, to be want­ed. We hope to be true, as true as we may be, to be hap­py, to be final­ly at ease, in com­fort, with com­pas­sion, and unalone.

And it is less dread­ful to wear the masks, the paints, the yardages of appar­el, to deliv­er the lines, in the shticks of our pre­ferred gen­res — com­ic or trag­ic or psy­cho-real­is­tic or fab­u­list or far­ci­cal, and live in the hope that we will not be found out, that we will not ulti­mate­ly be dis­cov­ered to be com­prised of noth­ing else but this.