One
of the concepts our society is most concerned with is freedom. But I
think our greatest fear is not about being enslaved (which, at the
moment, does not seem to be any possible threat), but about being
dependent; as long as we depend on other people for our basic needs,
we fear being blackmailed into doing things we don't want to do. From
childhood on, we struggle for our (personal) independence. In the
first place, our parents intrude in our life all the time: they tell
us when to get up, what clothes to put on, where to go (and
especially where not to go), whom to talk to (and whom not
to talk to); later on we are made to go to school, no matter if we
want to; we are also told when to go out, and what time we have to
get back; we don't have a say in most things concerning our life
while growing up.
That's
what prepares us for the world of "earning our own money."
Because then we don't have to listen to our parents anymore. We can
move out; we can meet any person we want to, hang out with everybody
our parents warned us against; we can eat what we want to; we can
follow any career or do any job we like (or don't do any work at all,
if we want to); all has become our own decision.
I
think that's what being independent really is about: making one's own
decisions. But by reaching majority and earning our own money, we
certainly have not gained much - while struggling against our parents
for independence we forgot to look at the whole picture: There really
is no independence for nobody in our society, not even for the people
at the top who are said to be really mighty.
Most
of us of course realize that our freedom here is only relative.
Instead of being dependent on our parents, we are now dependent on
our employers. We can choose the profession we'll be trained for and
practise, but sometimes there are not enough jobs and we have to take
a job in another field; we also depend on a market. Some of us don't
manage to get a job at all, either because of an illness or a lack of
skill or education, or because there are not enough jobs for
everybody in the country (technical rationalization has done a "good
job," for that matter); they are at least some time or partially
dependent on welfare programs.
So,
if we have enough money to spend on not only our basic needs, but
some things beyond, we are free to consume. We can decide if we buy
books or new clothes, a TV-Set or a new computer; if having a
relatively high wage at our disposal, we could go on a journey on our
holidays or save our money for buying an appartment, or what else
comes to mind. (We can even go to a bank and apply for credit.) Our
work is nothing we can decide much about, at least this goes for most
of us. There are professions where people are relatively free to
decide, but usually there is a client who has certain ideas we should
match. We cannot decide when to start working in the morning (if it
is in the morning and not at night) and how many hours we work; the
employer does this. He or she often even tells us how much time we
are allowed to take for a given task, no matter if that puts us into
a lot of stress. Strangely enough, we are often forced into a dress
code or even professional clothing (think e.g. of stewardesses); we
are thus made to represent a company where we usually don't have a
say in any decisions concerning the business - just like at home,
isn't it?
Our
independence is restricted to the time when we don't have to work.
Economically
seen, there is no independence. Employers need employees as much as
the other way around. Because there are more people in need of work
than jobs, employers at least in some sectors can determine wages and
other working conditions, unless there is no strong union behind the
workers or a good societal system that lets people choose if they'd
rather live on welfare or let themselves be exploited. (To my
knowledge, all systems of s. c. civilization by law make people do what
employers want.) On the other side, employers can only pay a kind of
wages that can be gained from a market (if they always do pay what's
possible or nurture a financial market as well, is another matter.)
Whatever, a high division of labor means, most of our basic needs we
can only care for by trading; usually we use money for the purpose.
Communities and societies need employers for creating jobs as well as
workers for paying taxes; this is the way communal tasks are taken
care of. Everybody depends of everybody else for his life
(historically, this has never been the case in such a high degree as
nowadays - at the contrary, s. c. primitive people were perfectly
able to care for their material needs without being dependent on
anybody else, except for the old; they shared life and material goods
because of emotional and psychological needs, not by force. But this
is another subject).
So
any freedom we gain is restricted to our personal life.
Most
of us find themselves in working conditions they would never choose
if they were free to do so, although we may not realize this from the
beginning. From school on we are forced and trained to focus on using
either our brain or our body. When we choose a profession, we
can only work on a part of a process, never the whole: we may design
or plan something (furniture, a house, a street, a book, or any
device for the household), but we won't construct it. Or, we will
construct or build or work on something another one has planned;
usually nobody builds the whole thing, just a (small) part. Even the
one who planned something usually is instructed to do so by another
person (and what he or she plans, is always planned for someone
else). We use only a few of our faculties; the big rest becomes
stunted, atrophies. Few of us have the opportunity of a job where
creativity is asked for; mostly the creative part of the process is
done by somebody else. Our spare time may be used up by family
matters, but if there is any time for creativity at all, we may not
be able to use it: Try working in a factory at the production level
or as a cashier in a supermarket (to name just two examples), after a
month or so there is not much creativity left; the working conditions
in many jobs do not evoke creativity at all but use up all the energy
we once had for it.
We
overstrain our bodies (as construction or manual workers), or we
don't use them at all, sitting the whole day in front of a computer
in an office (which is, of course, another way of overstraining our
bodies, as well as overtaxing our eyes). After having done so for
decades, our bodies start to resign - headache, backache, slipped
disc, and our joints cause problems. Not to mention all the boredom
that comes from working conditions that make almost everything into a
process of routine - which may, in some cases, result in depression
or other psychological problems. All because of the one-sidedness in
our professional life. Most of us are not happy but rationalize this
life - things are how they are, and without a division of labor
efficiency would go down so that everything gets more expensive.
Besides, there is always someone else in a lot worse conditions,
aren't we lucky!
Why
do we submit to this?
Most
people would answer this by pointing out our dependence on these jobs
for being able to meet our basic needs like food, shelter, and
clothing. I think this is just another rationalization; nobody could
force us into unfavorite working conditions if we just said NO. The
problem here is, there usually is not really a WE, meaning people are
not solidary to one another (which goes, by the way, for any
government that drops people financially when they won't submit; we
should not take this as an example for our own conduct). There is a
lot of fear behind this; who guarantees us that the other ones will
stick to their "no" (so that the employer would not find
anyone to work under e.g. unhealthy conditions)? At least, from
school on (sometimes even earlier) we are trained to be competitive,
we are educated into a system with places for winners and losers. The
program seems to work indeed really good, because not only teenagers,
but already children humilliate other children by labeling them as
losers: just because someone takes more time in thinking or
understanding than others, someone hasn't got the latest electronic
device, or her clothes don't match what the average girl finds
suitable, etc. It is, therefore, education in the first place that
hinders us from acting out of solidarity - instead, we are trained to
do anything not to become "a loser" in somebody else's
eyes.
And
this goes not only for our institutional education. Often we do not
experience a really loving, caring, and acknowledging atmosphere at
home. This way, we grow up with some, or maybe a whole lot of
deficits; we may feel we are not good enough, we have to try harder,
we are not loveable, or maybe even stupid. Being put down by our
parents, we may not be able to develop faculties the way we could do
in a loving and nurturing environment. People are often not aware of
that; they may think their parents did really okay when this is
indeed not the case. Some are beaten by their parents, but may even
rationalize it ("I was just a really wild boy, so I can
understand my dad losing his temper"); for others, the hurting
their parents caused them is not that easy to see, because
humilliating acts were more subtle, psychological ones (and so the
experience was swallowed down). Too many people need a lifetime for
remembering and working this out through a psychotherapeutic process;
and even more can't see or do not want to realize themselves being in
need of help - they live through their tensions by blaming others for
any bad incidents, acting resentfully, or even using violence against
others. And, what may be worse, they are so dependent on finally
getting some kind of acknowledgment and appreciation that they are
willing to do anything for it - if the usual competition doesn't do
it, mobbing will.
The
decisive point is the following: The needs we don't get fulfilled as
children may stick with us a long time. Those of us with low
self-esteem may not be able to defend themselves against overcharging
employers, because they always hope for being acknowledged and valued
in the long run; just to make one example. That means, we may have
moved out of our childhood home, but we are not emotionally
independent. At the contrary, we search for people that fill the
lacks our parents have caused. And, usually, we are not aware of
that; so that it is easy for others to get from us what they want,
without giving much in return (and leaving us again with a feeling of
emptiness). For many people, this is a regular experience when it
comes to friendship and/or love; but it goes for jobs and employers,
too, as well as for the colleagues we don't get solidarity from,
although they seemed so nice at first.
To sum up: (1) There is no economical independence; we are all
interdependent (even welfare-receivers consume what other people
produce). Besides, this goes for everybody and everything on earth.
(2) Emotional needs not being fulfilled in childhood will remain in
adulthood, usually well hidden behind rationalizations, resentment,
twisted thinking, and the like. Any emotional setting we don't know
about makes us vulnerable; we are easily brought to submit to
conditions that damage our integrity and creativity even further.
Independence
in our life is important concerning our emotions. Because only then
we have an inner freedom to really decide - what we do and don't
want, how we want to live, and how we connect to other people in the
first place. Feeling dependent, at least, is a result of the
subconscious fear we have grown that what we emotionally need is
being withhold from us. Without being dependent on what anybody else
thinks about us or what we should do, we may find out what we really
need with regard to other people. Only then we are not confined by
the necessity to set our material needs as priority, and to push
other people away: instead of being competitive (and lonesome), we
could live in harmony with ourselves and solidarity with everybody
else.
Of
course, this does not seem to go along with capitalism, where labor
is done for making money, not for providing for the needs of people.
But capitalism with all its negative effects like exploitation,
greed, destroyment of social relations and natural environment, is no
longer an option to live with; it does us no good. For any change, we
need to realize how we are (personally) affected by this system, and
how we ourselves constantly support it by focusing on our material
needs at the cost of our social and emotional needs we try hard not
to recognize: we have been hurt because of them almost from the
beginning of our life. Our children should not be forced into this
kind of life like we were. It really is our choice to go on like
before or finally break the chain.
Remember:
When most people no longer compete one another into bad working
conditions, the rich and mighty cannot blackmail us any longer;
they'd rather start changing the system than doing all the unacceptable work
themselves.
(For
further reading I recommend any book from Arno Gruen, see
literature.)