Jesus, by giving His perfect life as a payment for ours, so we may live eternally with Him in heaven, showed the true meaning of sacrifice and love. Now we as Christians must show the world the love we have been given, no matter the opposition we face. We must all be Lions of God. Jesus said, "I am the Way, and the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to Father except through Me." We can be the first glimpse of light, leading our peers, our family members, our enemies towards the true Light.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Right to Ourselves: Ego

An outsider looking into the current state of the population of most first-world countries would conclude, given the evidence found in everything from magazines promising perfect bodies by summer time to the number of social media accounts boasting our latest adventures, that we are a very egotistical society. In fact, we are not. Even if ego were the popularly defined belief of self-superiority, then the evidence of our image worshiping society does not support its existence, but lack of it. Therefore, this cannot be ego’s true nature.
            The “selfie” is a prime example of this misinterpretation. Take for instance teenagers on social media. As of May 2013, the average teen on the popular social media site Facebook has over 300 friends, according to a study titled “Internet Project” by PewResearch. The same study showed that 91% of the photos posted by these users are of themselves, taken by themselves, thus the term “selfie.” This practice has become so common that the Oxford Dictionary even added selfie as a legitimate word in the English language as of last year. One would think this practice of teen social media users immortalizing images of themselves so frequently would mean an overabundance of ego, yet PewResearch determined that, “teen Facebook users will manipulate their profile and timeline content in order to garner the maximum number of “likes,” and remove photos with too few “likes.”” The act of removing a picture solely because it did not reach the level of popularity desired is a strong indicator that this perceived ego brushing practice is in fact a well-disguised lack of self-esteem.
            A much darker reality stems from this lack of ego. Self-harm is the act of causing yourself intentional pain through cutting, burning, hair-pulling, or scratching, and can be as deadly as self-poisoning and intentionally breaking bones. The Truth Hurts conducted a study focusing on these things, and concluded that these symptoms and disorders have an onset in young people as early as twelve years old and as many as one out of every fifteen teens in the United Kingdom is affected by some form of self-harm. The study, published in Mental Health Practice, confirmed that, “It is very common for young people who self-harm to have low self-esteem, to lack confidence and to have a poor self-image.”
Has our misinterpretation of the term ego led to this? We live in a society that looks down upon those who boast in themselves, yet we accept a lack of self-confidence as the status quo by making the search of it through superficial “likes” as normal. In turn, we reap the deadly repercussions of a youth who believe themselves to be without self-worth.
A society that has lost this sense of self as described in the novella, Anthem, published in the United States in 1946 and written by famous novelist and philosopher, Ayn Rand. The novel’s working title prior to publication was “Ego,” and her work does a good job of personifying the destruction that comes when the word is misused, and worse, forgotten. She ends the novel by stating,
“And here, over the portals of my fort, I shall cut in the stone the word which is to be my beacon and my banner. The word which will not die, should we all perish in battle. The word which can never die on this earth, for it is the heart of it and the meaning and the glory.
The sacred word:
EGO.” (p.128.)
It is true that ego is the belief of one’s personal worth. It is not self-righteousness, neither is it the thought of your own superiority, nor is it the act of self-worship. A lack of ego and its widespread misinterpretation has led to a pandemic of people who are afraid to believe in themselves and their right to self-appreciation. Ego is in fact the one thing our society lacks. It is the personal conviction that your life, your actions, and your beliefs are worth something, and in turn, you are worth your own existence, effort, and faith.