The God Called Materialism
Unless you were born and raised in a so-called third world
country where the overcrowded masses eke out their existence in extreme poverty, you were groomed from childhood to worship
materialism.
The need for warmth, food and shelter is basic. But to
desire a luxury home with two-car attached garage, a swimming pool, two bathrooms, closets filled with clothes and a wine
cellar stocked with the worlds finest, is pure gluttony.
The celebration of Christmas is, in reality, training
ground for children. By experiencing the lights, glitter and rich foods leading up to the big day when a magical stack of
free gifts are awarded, the child quickly adapts to the artificial thrill of acquiring shiny but usually unnecessary things.
I personally remember the excitement felt during the build-up, and then the strange feeling of disappointment and depression
within hours, if not minutes after the last gift was opened.
It seemed that everything we did for weeks, and sometimes
months before Christmas was in preparation for that moment of gift exchange. Then the bright papers were rapidly torn away,
the secret things in the boxes revealed, and then the fall. Is that all? I remember asking myself.
Indeed, I have since learned. It was all a hoax. The Santa
Clause story. The baby Jesus story. The international prayer for love. All faked. The plastic toys were usually broken or
tossed aside before New Year. The best gift might have been a pair of ice skates, or a new sled.
I grew up not understanding why I disliked Christmas as
much as I did. But I fell into the rut of materialism just the same. My wife and I were both professional people who worked
hard to acquire as much material wealth as possible. We usually had two and sometimes three cars in the driveway. We bought
and sold several homes. And Christmas at our house was probably more elaborate than anything either Doris or I remembered
during our childhood.
We did something very strange about ten years ago. We
got interested in esoteric things, began studying new concepts of life, and decided we had been going in the wrong direction
for a very long time.
We sold or gave away virtually everything we had. The
house, the cars, the big color televisions, luxury beds, stereos, vast music collection, books, furniture, and a large display
case filled with rare antique and collectable glassware. It all went. We had two large auctions over the course of about five
or six years before we disposed of everything. But eventually it was all gone.
We used the money to pay off all of our debts, then struck
out in our one car and a Ryder truck filled with clothes and a few things we thought we could keep, for Arizona
where we lived with the Navaho and Hopi people.
Within months nearly everything in that truck was stolen
from us. We were homeless, destitute, and often without jobs. But we learned a valuable lesson during our three years in the
wilderness. Things didnt matter.
It took wit and pure guts sometimes, but Doris and I got
through that ordeal. To this day we are still living with only the things we need and little else. We live in a modest, one-bedroom
apartment, drive a functional 10-year-old vehicle and eat our meals on an oak drop leaf table that Doris
picked up in a used-furniture store.
And we dont celebrate Christmas.
Life is good.