Continued:
Even though I was feeling decent about myself by the time Nikki and I broke up, I still found myself in a somewhat precarious position as far as the future was concerned. At that time, I had a shit job. Like the kind that doesn't require you to graduate high school to get. My degree turned out to be only slightly better than useless. It was a video game design degree that I ended up getting because I, as a very young person who had found his "soul mate," followed Samantha to her college of choice and selected a program that interested me somewhat. I liked video games. Still do. It wasn't until I was just about done with the degree that I realized I was not cut out for the business of making video games. Also, I specialized in writing for games which, as it turns out, isn't so much a job that people get paid to do. At least, not very often. And those who do generally have a few published novels.
Anyway, I began to fear I'd be trapped in my horrible little failure-job forever. When you go through something like that, you get philosophical. Well, maybe you don't. I get philosophical. The job, which, by the way, was delivering pizzas, required me to be in my car for long stretches of time doing nothing in particular. Just driving around. So I started listening to a lot of audiobooks and, eventually, podcasts.
This is, I'm sad to say, where the skeptic you know today was born. It must be anti-climactic, but the fact is that I considered myself a de facto atheist before Nikki and I broke up, and I read The God Delusion and became a much stronger atheist. The God Delusion didn't go far enough for me, though, so I moved on to the other Horsemen, and then into the podcasting world with The Non-Prophets, Point of Inquiry, Skeptic's Guide to the Universe, Skeptoid. Very quickly, I learned how logic works. I learned the fallacies. I learned the science behind the claims. Over time, I picked up more sophisticated podcasts, delving further into philosophical and theological questions: The Atheist Experience (by the same people as Non-Prophets, but it's a call-in show that tends to lead to some pretty esoteric topics), Apologia (debates being theists and atheists on dozens of specifics topics that each worldview might inform), and, most recently, Reasonable Doubts (a very sophisticated exercise in the psychology of belief, counter-apologetics, and Biblical fact-checking, while still being entertaining). I jumped into classics, like Russell, Hume and Lucretius.
So there's my secret laid bare. I'm no genius. I figured out the problem of evil for myself in high school, but wouldn't have known what to do with the Transcendental Argument even today without the aid of the giants who came before me, and the giants who came before them. I listened to both sides and picked what I perceive as the winner. Religion has done me no great harm, but I think it is harmful. I remember the fear I had when I thought God would kill me as a child, or the distant but present worry of Hell until I finally dismissed that notion in college.
There will be those who claim that my heart's always been closed to God, but to make that claim is to suggest something very insidious about God. When I was a child, I sincerely believed. I wanted God and Jesus to be real. But every time I prayed, I always knew I was talking to myself. There was no other voice. I was given no revelation, no experience, nothing beyond what I forced on my own. My entire experience with Christianity could be reasonably compared to my experience accepting Jesus into my heart - I imagined it happening, and I knew at the time I was imagining it, but assumed that this utter lack of communication on God's part was how it was supposed to be. After all, the adults all seem to believe it. They're always right.
But to make the claim that I never opened my heart to God is to claim not only that God elected not to reveal himself to me in any way that I would describe (even at the age of seven) as meaningful, but that he specifically made me (or allowed me to be made) in such a way that I would be closed to him, and thus condemned to Hell, from birth.
I have no doubt that the shallowness I experienced of sitting in silence and having a conversation with my own inner monologue, combined with the clear assumption of belief on the part of, as far as I could see, every person in my immediate environment, led to me questioning even in elementary school. If God existed, and had responded in any way that could be construed as even slightly inspirational, I expect I would be a very different person today. I would never have questioned its existence.
But I can't say I learned nothing from prayer and seeking God. The silence of all but my own inner monologue taught me that, within my own head, I am truly, utterly alone. And when I leave the company of others, there is nothing that comes with me. Solitude is a fact of life. And it does offer its own peace.
The most spiritual (though I hate that word) experiences of my life have been spent in contemplation of solitude and insignificance. When the Sun goes down, go outside and stare into the night sky for an hour.
Before you do that, though, watch this:
Contemplate that the largest black hole we've measured has the mass of 18 billion Suns.
But, you know, God really made the whole place for us to live in.
Even though I was feeling decent about myself by the time Nikki and I broke up, I still found myself in a somewhat precarious position as far as the future was concerned. At that time, I had a shit job. Like the kind that doesn't require you to graduate high school to get. My degree turned out to be only slightly better than useless. It was a video game design degree that I ended up getting because I, as a very young person who had found his "soul mate," followed Samantha to her college of choice and selected a program that interested me somewhat. I liked video games. Still do. It wasn't until I was just about done with the degree that I realized I was not cut out for the business of making video games. Also, I specialized in writing for games which, as it turns out, isn't so much a job that people get paid to do. At least, not very often. And those who do generally have a few published novels.
Anyway, I began to fear I'd be trapped in my horrible little failure-job forever. When you go through something like that, you get philosophical. Well, maybe you don't. I get philosophical. The job, which, by the way, was delivering pizzas, required me to be in my car for long stretches of time doing nothing in particular. Just driving around. So I started listening to a lot of audiobooks and, eventually, podcasts.
This is, I'm sad to say, where the skeptic you know today was born. It must be anti-climactic, but the fact is that I considered myself a de facto atheist before Nikki and I broke up, and I read The God Delusion and became a much stronger atheist. The God Delusion didn't go far enough for me, though, so I moved on to the other Horsemen, and then into the podcasting world with The Non-Prophets, Point of Inquiry, Skeptic's Guide to the Universe, Skeptoid. Very quickly, I learned how logic works. I learned the fallacies. I learned the science behind the claims. Over time, I picked up more sophisticated podcasts, delving further into philosophical and theological questions: The Atheist Experience (by the same people as Non-Prophets, but it's a call-in show that tends to lead to some pretty esoteric topics), Apologia (debates being theists and atheists on dozens of specifics topics that each worldview might inform), and, most recently, Reasonable Doubts (a very sophisticated exercise in the psychology of belief, counter-apologetics, and Biblical fact-checking, while still being entertaining). I jumped into classics, like Russell, Hume and Lucretius.
So there's my secret laid bare. I'm no genius. I figured out the problem of evil for myself in high school, but wouldn't have known what to do with the Transcendental Argument even today without the aid of the giants who came before me, and the giants who came before them. I listened to both sides and picked what I perceive as the winner. Religion has done me no great harm, but I think it is harmful. I remember the fear I had when I thought God would kill me as a child, or the distant but present worry of Hell until I finally dismissed that notion in college.
There will be those who claim that my heart's always been closed to God, but to make that claim is to suggest something very insidious about God. When I was a child, I sincerely believed. I wanted God and Jesus to be real. But every time I prayed, I always knew I was talking to myself. There was no other voice. I was given no revelation, no experience, nothing beyond what I forced on my own. My entire experience with Christianity could be reasonably compared to my experience accepting Jesus into my heart - I imagined it happening, and I knew at the time I was imagining it, but assumed that this utter lack of communication on God's part was how it was supposed to be. After all, the adults all seem to believe it. They're always right.
But to make the claim that I never opened my heart to God is to claim not only that God elected not to reveal himself to me in any way that I would describe (even at the age of seven) as meaningful, but that he specifically made me (or allowed me to be made) in such a way that I would be closed to him, and thus condemned to Hell, from birth.
I have no doubt that the shallowness I experienced of sitting in silence and having a conversation with my own inner monologue, combined with the clear assumption of belief on the part of, as far as I could see, every person in my immediate environment, led to me questioning even in elementary school. If God existed, and had responded in any way that could be construed as even slightly inspirational, I expect I would be a very different person today. I would never have questioned its existence.
But I can't say I learned nothing from prayer and seeking God. The silence of all but my own inner monologue taught me that, within my own head, I am truly, utterly alone. And when I leave the company of others, there is nothing that comes with me. Solitude is a fact of life. And it does offer its own peace.
The most spiritual (though I hate that word) experiences of my life have been spent in contemplation of solitude and insignificance. When the Sun goes down, go outside and stare into the night sky for an hour.
Before you do that, though, watch this:
Contemplate that the largest black hole we've measured has the mass of 18 billion Suns.
But, you know, God really made the whole place for us to live in.
VIEW 3 of 3 COMMENTS
This was a good read. Im sorry about your childhood friend.
Aw Nikki's my real name too (dont tell xp)
I dont think organized religion is particularly nefarious unless its used to serves a personal agendas. It fulfills, quite effectively a societal need, for order, and control that government or any worldly threats cant. Being a bit of a socialist, and not trusting much of the ignorant masses knowing whats best for themselves, unless they are lead by a code, I understand the need and benefit for it. It serves our culture in many important ways. None of which instilling a "ultimate truth" as much as hope, drive, ethics and responsibilities (by way of the greatest motivator, peer pressure and fear)
For me the most important thing I've ever gotten from Christianity was hope. While its important to be skeptical its hard to function to your full potential with out hope of some kind. Its just as improbable to believe you will find a "soul mate" as you will "go to heaven" but no one argues the first as much. We all need to lie to ourselves just a little if it helps you make it thought the day, as bleak as that sounds. People need to believe they will reach there dreams, they will be rewarded for hard work and ethical behavior, because for the most part, these are beliefs that are in there best interest regardless of the validity of what pushes them. Strong people learn to drive themselves based on pride, and work ethic, some of us need something a little more lofty to kick us in the right direction be it imaginary or not, its in societies best interest.
At the same time ignorant religion often cripples and scares people with innate "fringe" beliefs, ideas, and preferences. I remember when I was 16 and was being pursued by a girl (ironically also named Nikki) I had feelings for, I didnt give in for the longest time because I was raised christian and thought it was a sin. The entire time I was with her I felt guilt, sullying the memories of what should have been a sweet first love, not something to be made to feel dirty and forced to hide because of an oppressive self created god.
College is a really good time for intelligent discourse about religion and critical thinking free of stigma, and judgment. Sophomore year I took one of my favorite classes to date, "science of survival", it was about thinking critically with a intelligent skeptical mind. We touched on everything, from religion, to pseudo science, to new age, to homeopathy. At the end of the course I asked the professor, a self proclaimed skeptic, what he thought about god.
He said something that pretty much turned me from a then atheist (who wished she could still be a christian for hope alone despite the skeptic in her saying it was nonsensical) into an agnostic. He said that while he has a skeptical mind, he believes that the probability of humans to exist, to have evolved so, with so many potential obstacles, so many complex systems, even despite our own self destructiveness, that its only logical to believe that we are a "miracle" (a freak happenstance defying probability and explanation).
While god may not be kind, care about you as an individual, or be omnipotent, or even have a grand design, I believe there is a creator of human life, be it merely the spark that set forward motion to human life.
Although being a fan of foreskin, girl on girl action, and sodomy, I was never really a good christian.
Another teacher of mine in my aesthetics class brought up the collective unconscious, another thing that makes me believe in some kind of etherial one-ness despite the skeptic in me. How can so many people, across so many cultural, ethnic, religious groups all have so much of the same iconography, needs, origin stories, architypes, and how can we not be interconnected on a higher level then we allow ourselves to be.
This teacher, Professor Smith, has some out there self-serving beliefs you might find funny. He thinks that true artists, and the great aliens of society, are really more higher evolved creators, endowed with the ability to tap into the collective unconscious, to the very soul of what makes us human, and use it as a tool for communication. Then again he perverted Kant's theory of genius (which was that only truly independent thoughts free from evolution from other thoughts could be deemed as genius) by claiming that while newton wasnt a genius (since his ideas were lent from earlier ideas) that my profesor was a genuis because he worked on some of the first CG generated 3d printed sculptures (which is a evolution of ideas, not genius). Egos
I feel like I somehow got really off topic. Dammit.
Anyway like I was saying, freezepop rulez noob.
I like the thought that there are, after all, quite a lot of intelligent people out there.