Site icon Amaro Araujo

Don’t grow, it’s a trap

Institutions of power use(d) basic principles by changing their fundamental meaning to control and put limitations over the masses. Unconsciously, generations, schools, religions and educational systems have passed them on (as the way to be and behave) and became standards from which we limit our real and full potential. What becomes important is to fit a certain box (culture, religion, education, society, tribe) not exploring boundaries and questioning systems in place. As a child we search, we bite, we explore, we dare; Without fear, without questioning ourselves, without following all rules and concepts. We’re happy and fulfilled.

Most of the ones we call genius, were at their time complete “disruptive” and therefore set aside society. Often probing exclusion, (unfair) trials, pejorative labeling and discredited by the “owners” of the society of that time. Be it religious, social or any other power system in place. People like Colombo, Leonardo Da Vinci, Einstein, Mozart, Molière or Shakespeare. On a much recent level we could name MLK, Gandhi or Mandela. People that in their time and during their journey could have been labelled as terrorists, traitors, lunatics and daydreamers. Only years after (many years in most cases) we’re able to understand their stand point, to share their vision or willing to be part of such torrent.

Despite all those examples, societies keep limiting people’s initiatives, creativity and boundaries. To keep their control.

Words like “you Should”, “you shouldn’t”, “you can’t”, “that’s not fair”, “do you care” “you must”, “we’ve always did it that way” and others alike are based on wrong relation towards oneself and the others as they’re not source of truly independence, respect and emotional connection but source of habits, creeds, education and expectations of the world that surrounds us. We go through the day expecting the world and the others to behave in certain patterns. If they don’t we’re disappointed, they’re “wrong”, they’re not behaving or they don’t care for us or the others. It’s all about expectations, labelling or putting people in boxes.

Since childhood we’re told what to do, what to say, what to feel, what to show, how to behave and react. “Do this, don’t do that”, “Say hello”, “ don’t swear”, “be fair to your brother”, “take care of”. The story goes on at school, religious education, sports, high school and so on. By age of 18, you’re a “finish product”. You’re “programmed”. You know what to say, how to behave, how to respond, how to react.

As you grow up you build your intelligence and personality, you think for yourself. Pity that in most cases it’s contained in certain limits and perimeter to keep you within the “circle”.

As you enter in your “active life” you have therefore this “guidelines”, these rules of etiquette that you’ll follow. Seems there are more rules on earth than people to obey them. Why? This need of control and standardize as a big assembly line.

Below are just a few examples of concepts that have been molded in the “right and wrong” approach and the “right” version shadows completely any other intention:

Bottom line, values, beliefs and ethics aren’t monopoly of religions, societies or governments. They’re there to support you and each of us, to reach their full potential and vision, not to limit or restrain us from chasing the best version of ourselves. The best way we could fit and enhance our ourselves and our society is by exploring all our potential, not fitting boxes or frameworks and living by expectations.

I’m not here defending an anarchical society without values and principles nor without respect for each other and our environment. I’m just questioning how much limitation those beliefs have been weighing in all generations (past and to come) by just putting in our hearts and minds wrong concepts of the world itself.

Exit mobile version