The search for human vocation
Introduction
In today's world, where there is a great search for meaning, a search for vocation, etc., there is a great need for spirituality. Malraux said that ‘the 21st century will be spiritual or it will not be’. The inner quest is less and less valued, everything is designed to distract the mind: be it through pleasure, or even the layout of cities (shop windows, light games to capture attention, fetishism of objects and relationships with a commercial dimension) [1]. As Bernanos puts it, man is fleeing from himself into the world of machines [2]. In this flight, he loses not only his freedom, but also all his primordial substance. In the mass culture, where everything is confused, where no archetypal pole in Jung's sense emerges, where no horizon appears clearly and precisely, where chaos subsists, where everyone struggles for his own carnal survival and not for his own spiritual salvation, where everyone veils his own divine nature, his own phytra, his own original nature in the Muslim sense, for a slow decadence towards total chaos: psychological, moral, spiritual.
The myth
It is worth remembering our Greco-Roman heritage and what we can learn from understanding the myths that came before us. Humanity is a collection of heritages and traditions that have led to the society we live in today. We are all heirs to Egyptian, Greek, Babylonian and other traditions. Even the great monotheistic religions are heirs to the wealth of mythology that preceded them. Myths were created to affirm the people as civilization, were born with the people and, according to Schelling [3], are tautegorical. Mythology is carried by the people and is not external to them. That is why it is a great source of inspiration and acts as catharsis in the event of problems. They are often quite complex messages that need to be decoded, but they also have an impact that spans the ages. In myth, what interests us is the theme of the search for vocation and its rightful place. The Greeks had a paradigm centred on the notion of the cosmos, from which they derived their mythology. The cosmos imposes a finite world. This implies thinking of a finite world in which everyone has a specific place: we cite Plato's perfect city in the Republic, which establishes a clear and precise organization of the city in relation to each part of the soul (temperance, courage, wisdom) [4]. The warrior is a warrior, not a craftsman, and his role is solely that of waging war. Two important texts for understanding the relationship between chaos and the search for one's place are the Iliad and the Odyssey. These texts are rich in teachings because Odysseus' quest is to return to Ithaca where his vocation resides as king of Ithaca, husband of Penelope and father of Telemaque. Conceptually, the Odyssey is a journey into oblivion. Various trials await Odysseus to make him forget his true vocation and drown him in the whirlpool of chaos. Nowadays, the culture of the perishable, of the hyper-consumable, of commodity fetishism distances us from our true vocation, our imprint, our fitra [5]. Everything pushes us away, just as the wave of the sea and Poseidon's rage try to push Ulysses away from Ithaca. What is the parallel with Homer's text?
The initial chaos
From the very beginning, Homer uses the Cyprian hymns that recount the first chaos, the initial chaos, the story of the apple of discord that Eris, the goddess of discord, brings to the wedding of Peleus and Thetis. This primordial chaos leads to three other types of chaos:
- the Greeks go to war to recover Menelaus' wife, Helen
- the Trojan War
- the massacre of the Trojans at the end of the Iliad, where the Greeks sin through Hybris. There is a total disproportion in the behaviour of the Greeks during the sack of Troy.
This disproportion upsets the gods and is one of the causes of Odysseus' wandering for 10 years.
Odysseus' journey, the journey of oblivion
All the obstacles placed by Poseidon in Odysseus' path towards his true vocation are linked to the figure of oblivion. The aim is to make him forget the meaning of his journey and the significance of his life. The song of the sirens and the sorceress Circe make him lose his memory, the sleep Ulysses suffers near Ithaca drives him back out to sea and the obstacle Calypso interrupts his journey for 7 years. Let us review each of these episodes and see how they contribute to the concept of forgetting.
1. Calypso episode
Calypso in Greek means she who hides, she who guards (allupton in Greek). The island of Calypso is a wonder, an earthly paradise where every man would like to spend his life. Calypso is an immortal nymph who decides to keep Ulysses hidden on her island. She grants him all earthly pleasures to prevent him from returning to his rightful place. Ulysses stays with Calypso for 7 years, but every night he sits on a rock and cries his heart out for not being in Ithaca, looking at the horizon. He knows that this place is not his. He feels trapped.
‘And yet, I hope, I wish at every moment
To be home and to experience the hour of return.’
Canto 5, Odyssey
This can be likened to a cognitive bias, the status quo bias, where the person seems to be stuck in a situation where his calling is not to be found, where his time seems to be wasted. He chooses to stay there to avoid taking risks elsewhere. Athena, seeing Odysseus' distress, asks Zeus to let him return to Ithaca where “it is written that he will come home” (Canto 1, Odyssey). Hermes, the messenger of the gods, takes the message to Calypso and asks her to release Odysseus.
‘O our Father, son of Kronos, the first of the gods,
if it is now pleasing to the blessed gods that the skilled Odysseus should return to his home,
let us hasten to send Hermes, the messenger Argiphon, to the island of Ogygia
to report the infallible decree of our deliberations to the nymph with the beautiful curly hair,
the return of the everlasting Odysseus, as it was written that he would return home’.
Canto 1, Odyssey
In response to Hermes' message, Calypso offers Odysseus eternal life and youth (unlike Aurora's promise to Titus, which only gave him immortality). Ulysses realizes that he can only access eternity by returning to Ithaca, where all his primordial nature is expressed.
2. The island of the Cyclops
When Odysseus arrives on the island of the Cyclops, he is taken prisoner by Polyphemus, son of Poseidon. This episode highlights Odysseus' cunning in escaping, but also contains an interesting lesson. When Polyphemus asks the name of the man who pierced his eye. Odysseus answers his name perfectly: I am Odysseus. Etymologically, Ulysses is called Οὖτις in Greek. But when we spell this name with a space, Οὖ τις, it takes on the meaning of ‘not being’. Ulysses ‘is not’ until he lives in Ithaca. He is nobody because his ‘being’ is tied to Ithaca and his vocation as king. When he speaks to the Cyclops, he is not alone in his position. And until he is there, he is nobody in the cosmos. Until we are concretely engaged in a path that has been reserved for us and that we discover through experience, the feeling of unimportance, of uselessness, appears. Like Ulysses when he replies ‘I am a person’. He is unimportant. His response is therefore a relentless justesse:
‘Cyclops, you ask me about my illustrious name. Well, I answer you: my name is
Nobody and Nobody is the name by which my parents and all my other companions call me’.
Canto 9, Odyssey
3. Circe
The episode of Circe also contains the figure of oblivion. When Odysseus' companions enter Circe's palace, she turns them into pigs. Ulysses manages to escape Circe's magic thanks to a potion given to him by Hermes. What saves him from transformation: magic and transformation change reality and veil the search for the meaning of life. Sometimes we have the illusion of what is real. Odysseus stays with Circe for a year before leaving her to talk to the soothsayer Tiresias in the underworld to help him return home.
4. The episode of the Sirens
The sirens' songs are intended to deceive the souls of men and lead them to death. They are deadly songs. The singing disorients, numbs the mind and contributes to oblivion. The Sirens' test is also of the same kind. Through singing, Ulysses must lose his orientation, both geographically and psychologically. All these trials remind us that, like Ulysses, we can lose the thread of our existence when fun, lack of inner revolt and the status quo take over the imprint of our vocation. Each person has his or her own vocation, which he or she is led to discover in the course of his or her life. Signs are sent, but the difficulty lies in knowing how to see them. Sometimes a veil hides them. The world is a temptation, and in its temptation, it tries to make us forget what we are meant to do. Ulysses' vocation is to act to restore the cosmic order. He rejects the material eternity of Calypso to enter cosmic eternity. It is as a member of this order that he enters eternity. According to the Greeks, the cosmos is eternal and, by finding his place in it, he becomes a fragment of that cosmic eternity. In our case, it is by knowing our vocation that we ourselves become creators and architects of the work of humanity. The role of each of us is to be fruitful through our own vocation and to be able to reveal it.
[1] “The Society of the Spectacl”, Guy Debord
[2] “The France of Robots”, Bernanos
[3] “Introduction to the Philosophy of Mythology”, Schelling
[4] “The Republic”, Plato
[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fitra
https://comedonchisciotte.org/la-ricerca-della-vocazione-umana/
Translation by Costantino Ceoldo