Analytics wrote:wenglund wrote:Think of it as not unlike choosing to be optimistic and positive in one's outlook on life. Making such choices don't rob things of inherent or explicit positivity and optimism, though they do enable us to see things in that way--whether inherently so or not.
What I am advocating is taking personal responsibility for, and control over, ones disposition--a form of proactive joyousness, rather than leaving oneself at the mercy of reactive joyousness.
I hope this helps.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-
I agree that we can and should choose a proactively joyful disposition, but that doesn’t negate the responsibility for proactively choosing environments that facilitate joy.
In Man’s Search for Meaning, Viktor Frankl claimed something to the effect that even when he was imprisoned in a concentration camp, he was still fully autonomous in his own mind and was able to chose to live a happy, purpose-driven, fulfilling life. If he was capable of that, I’m sure most of us could be happy in an LDS ward.
However, for some of us trying to find internal joy while in an LDS Church service is like somebody finding an internal sense of physical well-being while eating a diet consisting of nothing but doughnuts and an exercise routine that consists of carrying Coke from the fridge to the couch.
A lot of Mormonism is driven by a commitment to endure to the end. If Mormonism itself (e.g. the theology, the correlated lessons, the standardized worship services, gender roles) doesn’t do it for you and if you don’t happen to be assigned to a ward where you are energized by the other people who were assigned to be there, then you can find yourself motivated by nothing more than a commitment to obey the law of obedience and endure to the end.
I totally agree with what others have said—it works for many people and if it works for you then that’s great. But if it doesn’t work for you, then you have the moral obligation to take responsibility for your own life and choose an environment that is more conductive to the joy of yourself and the people around you.
While I view the Church quite differently from your caraciture as likened to eating only doughnuts and carry Coke from the fridge to the couch, I do sympathize with your point about finding an environment that will work in one's best interest and to the best interest of one's family. This is particularly true with environments that may be inherently toxic or that inadvertantly engender toxicity in some--including those within the home.
And, no matter what the walk of life, though we may not always make the correct choices regarding what is in our best interest (my eating habits during my youth and early adulthood left much to be desired), hopefully as we experience things and grow and learn from our mistakes, that will improve. Such is the maturation process.
Thanks, -Wade Englund-