Let’s be honest,
the most important and most underrated virtue of all is wisdom, more so than
courage or love. The reason for this is because nobody is born into wisdom.
Children, when they are born, do not know fear or shame or guilt or hatred... WE
teach all of these things and many more. Children are, indeed, born a
whiteboard where ideas and ideals, values, virtues and vices are added by
anyone having access to their minds. This is not an ideal state of being, as
children are also born given to foolishness, driven by emotion and wants, and
carrying a heavy baggage of genetic material that may be flawed. Yet, most do
know love, as they feel, offer and receive plenty in its purest form from parents
first and foremost, and some do know courage, either by lacking fear or facing
it innately. The same is true of all virtues: generosity, kindness, mercy, patience
etc. Some are simply born possessing such things and must struggle to retain
these qualities later in life. Yet not wisdom. No child has ever been born wise,
save for legends and religious tales, and even then, the spirit that dwelt
within the body was much older and had witnessed much.
Wisdom is the most
important of virtues because it is the most difficult to attain, and the one
that shadows all the others. Indeed, one needs to master all the others before
even contemplating wisdom. Now, defining wisdom is as difficult as defining
love or honour. You will know it if you see it, but in its authentic form it is
rare ... and precious. Wisdom is not just the cumulation of all other virtues,
it is also the one that can never be had in excess. Yes, it is possible to have
an excess of love (to the point of being blinded by it), or of courage (to the
point of insanity), or of kindness (to the point of self-destruction) or of patience
(to the point of never acting on impulse even when the time is right for it),
etc. Yet there can never be an excess of wisdom, since wisdom commands not just
what action should be taken and when, but also to what degree. It implies not
only understanding of surroundings and awareness of the bigger picture, of players
and consequences, of characters, times and strengths or weaknesses, but also intuition,
knowledge, foresight and freedom of mind.
Wisdom is difficult
to grasp and even harder to attain, which is why it is never too early to start
pursuing it. Like the ideal of an absolute truth, full wisdom will never be
truly attained, because the upper limits of it are as undefined as those of
love and as infinite as the capacity for human greatness. There will always be
room for better, yet the world today does not need for all to be Zen monks, but
for a few more to set their minds on becoming wiser, without waiting for the
passage of time to do it all for them. If time is an infinite river, flowing
into a sea of absolute wisdom, one will always travel further by paddling than
by simply being carried by the flow and by the wind. Even if, in the end, you
are no closer to reaching the sea of absolute than the ones doing nothing or paddling
against the flow, the first step in becoming wiser is understanding that the goal
is not reaching the sea, but travelling away from foolishness each day. In the
end, one must not seek to compare the distance travelled, but to respect the
perils of any journey, as no two rivers are alike, and no two journeys through
life are the same.
As it stands, wisdom
is not laughed at or berated, nor are the wiser persecuted or their advice
forbidden. To do so would be an acknowledgement of wisdom. Instead it is
ignored, both in policy and in culture. It is treated as either a feat of time
and experience, or is misrepresented as being different in each culture, when
it actually isn’t. There are no songs about wisdom, no poems about its merits
and it is often not even mentioned among virtues.
Why this is so has,
to my knowledge, not been researched. Indeed, to research why wisdom is
underrated and often overlooked would mean one first has to stop overlooking it
and understand its potential. My guess is that there is simply no room for
wisdom in a world dominated by the desire to have more. The wisest of us need
neither power nor wealth. They are not heavy spenders and do not engage in
political struggles, because they understand that such things are not only
useless to living a complete life, but also harmful to the individual, to the
species and to the planet... in short, to humankind as a whole.
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