Thursday 19 August 2021

Selfing and Othering

Just like many of you, I’m sure, I’ve been following the football with keen interest. I’ve been enjoying the unusual experience of following an England team that actually believes it can win and is free of the scars of past traumatic defeats. But one of the things that always strikes me is the sheer tribalism of the sport, of any sport, I suppose. Booing the opponent’s national anthem, for instance, has become a sad yet inevitable feature of international sporting fixtures. This to me is a good example of what I call “othering”. When we “other” people, we see them as different from us in some fundamental way, often accompanied by suspicion, fear or even hatred. Racism, nationalism, sexism, homophobia and the like are all rooted in this tendency.

Buddhism doesn’t have a lot to say about “othering” in this way. But it has a great deal to say about the other side of the coin, which I will call “selfing”. According to Buddhism, belief in a permanent, fixed and separate self is one of the fetters which bind us to suffering. At a personal level, we identify with our body, our feelings or our thoughts and opinions. At the interpersonal level, we identify this self with the selves of our nearest-and-dearest, perhaps with our group of friends, or our football club. At the societal level, that identification may be with our culture, our political beliefs or our nation. But the problem is that anyone who isn’t in that group, who doesn’t support that team or share our feelings, say, about Brexit, becomes “other”. We’ve seen in recent years a very strong tendency to polarisation in our society, Brexit being a good example, where many of us may never associate with people who hold different views. The result can be demonisation and a complete lack of fellow-feeling and empathy. That is corrosive, both for us as individuals and for the society we share. But what do we do about it?

The Buddha taught that our idea of the self as separate and fixed is simply wrong. But we cling to the idea that there is something solid and enduring there and experience pain and grief when things don’t go the way we want. Our body ages and changes and is subject to sickness, our emotions are fickle and fluid, and, as anyone who’s ever meditated will know, our mind has a mind of its own, with thoughts just thinking themselves. But it’s that conviction that we are somehow fixed and separate which is also at the root of all the “othering” we do and the pain it causes. Difference can feel threatening, make us uneasy and unsure. One way to overcome this is to observe our experience closely and reflect that there really is nothing enduring there, nothing ultimately fixed or separate, so that, at some point, insight will arise and, with it, release from bondage. That requires quite a lot of application and clarity of mind. But another way to approach this is simply through the cultivation of loving-kindness. When we do this, perhaps in meditation, we reflect that everyone else is in the same boat, feeling the pain of separation and wanting to be happy, safe and free from suffering. Reflecting in this way is a powerful tool for the transformation of the heart and the perfect antidote to “othering”. Where there is love, there can be no “othering” and, where there is no “othering”, the painful bonds of “selfing” can, at least for a time, be loosened. So here’s my suggestion: when you get a quiet moment, try to see what you have in common with the people on the other side of the self/other divide in your life, which is a lot.  They have human fears and hopes, just like you. They want to be happy, just as you do, and they want to avoid suffering, just as you do. I can confidently say that this practice has changed my life, and I’m sure it will make a difference to yours.