Chapter
                                II,  Now
                                I Become Myself, pg. 9-22  
                  Next
                            > (pg. 22-36)                   A
                      VISION OF VOCATION 
                  With
                      twenty-one words, carefully chosen and artfully woven, 
  May Sarton evokes the quest for vocation--at least, my quest 
  for vocation--with candor and precision: 
                  
                    Now
                          I become myself. 
    It's taken time, many years and places. 
    I have been dissolved and shaken, 
    Worn other people's faces. ...1 
                   
                  What
                          a long time it can take to become the person one 
                    has always been! How often in the process we mask ourselves 
      in faces that are not our own. How much dissolving and 
      shaking of ego we must endure before we discover our deep 
      identity--the true self within every human being that is the 
      seed of authentic vocation. 
                  I
                        first learned about vocation growing up in the church.
                        I value much about the religious tradition in which I
                      was raised: its humility about its own convictions, its
                      respect for the world's diversity, its concern for justice.
                      But the idea of "vocation" I picked up in those circles created distortion until 
    I grew strong enough to discard it. I mean the idea that vocation, or calling,
    comes from a voice external to ourselves, a voice of moral demand that asks
    us to become someone we are not yet--someone different, someone better, someone
    just beyond our reach. 
                  That
                        concept of vocation is rooted in a deep distrust of 
                    selfhood, in the belief that the sinful self will always
                        be "self-ish" unless corrected by external
                        forces of virtue. It is a notion 
    that made me feel inadequate to the task of living my own life, 
    creating guilt about the distance between who I was and who 
    I was supposed to be, leaving me exhausted as I labored to 
    close the gap.                   Today
                        I understand vocation quite differently--not as a 
                    goal to be achieved but as a gift to be received. Discovering 
    vocation does not mean scrambling toward some prize just 
    beyond my reach but accepting the treasure of true self I 
    already possess. Vocation does not come from a voice "out 
    there" calling me to become something I am not. It comes 
    from a voice "in here" calling me to be the person I was born 
    to be, to fulfill the original selfhood given me at birth by God. 
                  It
                        is a strange gift, this birthright gift of self. Accepting
                        it 
    turns out to be even more demanding than attempting to become
                      someone else! I have sometimes responded to that 
  demand by ignoring the gift, or hiding it, or fleeing from it, or 
  squandering it--and I think I am not alone. There is a Hasidic 
  tale that reveals, with amazing brevity, both the universal tendency  
  to want
  to be someone else and the ultimate importance of becoming  
  one's self: Rabbi
  Zusya, when he was an old man, said, "In the coming  
  world, they will not
  ask me:'Why were you not Moses?' They will ask me:  
  'Why were you not Zusya?"'2 
                  If
                      you doubt that we all arrive in this world with gifts and 
  as a gift, pay attention to an infant or a very young child. A few 
  years ago, my daughter and her newborn baby came to live 
  with me for a while. Watching my granddaughter from her 
  earliest days on earth, I was able, in my early fifties, to see 
  something that had eluded me as a twenty-something parent: 
  my granddaughter arrived in the world as this kind of person 
  rather than that, or that, or that. 
                  She
                      did not show up as raw material to be shaped into 
  whatever image the world might want her to take. She arrived 
  with her own gifted form, with the shape of her own sacred 
  soul. Biblical faith calls it the image of God in which we are 
  all created. Thomas Merton calls it true self. Quakers call it 
  the inner light, or "that of God" in every person. The humanist
  tradition  
  calls it identity and integrity. No matter what you call it, it is a pearl of
   
  great price. 
                  In
                      those early days of my granddaughter's life, I began 
  observing the inclinations and proclivities that were planted in her
                      at birth. I noticed, and I still notice, what she likes
                      and dislikes, what she is drawn toward and repelled by,
  how she 
  moves, what she does, what she says.                   
                  I
                      am gathering my observations in a letter. When my grand- 
  daughter reaches her late teens or early twenties, I will make 
  sure that my letter finds its way to her, with a preface something 
  like this: "Here is a sketch of who you were from your earliest 
  days in this world. It is not a definitive picture--only you can 
  draw that. But it was sketched by a person who loves you very 
  much. Perhaps these notes Willie help you do sooner something 
  your grandfather did only later: remember who you were when 
  you first arrived and reclaim the gift of true self." 
                  We
                        arrive in this world with birthright gifts--then we 
    spend the first half of our lives abandoning them or letting moth- 
    ers disabuse us of them. As young people, we are surrounded 
    by expectations that may have little to do with who we really 
    are, expectations held by people who are not trying to discern 
    our selfhood but to fit us into slots. In families, schools, work- 
    places, and religious communities, we are trained away from 
    true self toward images of acceptability; under social pressures 
    like racism and sexism our original shape is deformed beyond 
    recognition; and we ourselves, driven by fear, too often betray 
    true self to gain the approval of others. 
                  We
                        are disabused of original giftedness in the first half
                        of 
    our lives. Then -- if we are awake, aware, and able to admit our 
    loss -- we spend the second half trying to recover and reclaim 
    the gift we once possessed. 
                  When
                      we lose track of true self, how can we pick up the 
                    trail? One way is to seek clues in stories from our younger 
  years, years when we lived closer to our birthright gifts. A few 
  years ago, I found some clues to myself in a time machine of 
  sorts. A friend sent me a tattered copy of my high school news-- 
  paper from May 1957 in which I had been interviewed about 
  what I intended to do with my life. With the certainty to be 
  expected of a high school senior, I told the interviewer that I 
  would become a naval aviator and then take up a career in 
  advertising. 
                  I
                        was indeed "wearing other people's faces," and
                        I can tell 
    you exactly whose they were. My father worked with a man 
    who had once been a navy pilot. He was Irish, charismatic, 
    romantic, full of the wild blue yonder and a fair share of the 
    blarney, and I wanted to be like him. The father of one of my 
    boyhood friends was in advertising, and though I did not yearn 
    to take on his persona, which was too buttoned-down for my 
    taste, I did yearn for the fast car and other large toys that 
    seemed to be the accessories of his selfhood! 
                  These
                        self-prophecies, now over forty years old, seem 
    wildly misguided for a person who eventually became a 
    Quaker, a would-be pacifist, a writer, and an activist. Taken  
    literally, they illustrate how early in life we can lose track of who 
    we are. But inspected through the lens of paradox, my desire 
    to become an aviator and an advertiser contain clues to the 
    core of true self that would take many years to emerge: clues, 
    by definition, are coded and must be deciphered. 
                  Hidden
                      in my desire to become an "ad man" was a life- 
  long fascination with language and its power to persuade, the 
  same fascination that has kept me writing incessantly for 
  decades. Hidden in my desire to become a naval aviator was 
  something more complex: a personal engagement with the 
  problem of violence that expressed itself at first in military  
  fantasies and then, over a period of many years, resolved itself in 
  the pacifism I aspire to today. When I flip the coin of identity 
  I held to so tightly in high school, I find the paradoxical 
"opposite" that emerged as the years went by. 
                  If
                        I go farther back, to an earlier stage of my life, the
                        clues 
    need less deciphering to yield insight into my birthright gifts 
    and callings. In grade school, I became fascinated with the 
    mysteries of flight. As many boys did in those days, I spent end- 
    less hours, after school and on weekends, designing, crafting, 
    flying, and (usually) crashing model airplanes made of fragile 
    balsa wood. 
                  Unlike
                        most boys, however, I also spent long hours creating 
     eight- and twelve-page books about aviation. I would turn 
    a sheet of paper sideways; draw a vertical line down the middle; 
    make diagrams of, say, the cross-section of a wing; roll the 
    sheet into a typewriter; and peck out a caption explaining how 
    air moving across an airfoil creates a vacuum that lifts the 
    plane. Then I would fold that sheet in half along with several 
    others I had made, staple the collection together down the 
    spine, and painstakingly illustrate the cover. 
                  I had
                      always thought that the meaning of this paperwork 
  was obvious: fascinated with flight, I wanted to be a pilot, or 
  at least an aeronautical engineer. But recently, when I found 
  a couple of these literary artifacts in an old cardboard box, I 
  suddenly saw the truth, and it was more obvious than I had 
  imagined. I didn't want to be a pilot or an aeronautical engineer 
  or anything else related to aviation. I wanted to be an 
  author, to make books--a task I have been attempting from 
  the third grade to this very moment! 
                  From
                        the beginning, our lives lay down clues to selfhood 
                    and vocation, though the clues may be hard to decode. But 
    trying to interpret them is profoundly worthwhile--especially 
    when we are in our twenties or thirties or forties, feeling  
    profoundly lost, having wandered, or been dragged, far away from 
    our birthright gifts. 
                  Those
                        clues are helpful in counteracting the conventional 
     concept of vocation, which insists that our lives must be 
    driven by "oughts." As noble as that may sound, we do not find 
    our callings by conforming ourselves to some abstract moral 
    code. We find our callings by claiming authentic selfhood, by 
    being who we are, by dwelling in the world as Zusya rather 
    than straining to be Moses. The deepest vocational question is 
    not "What ought I to do with my life?" It is the more elemental 
    and demanding "Who am I? What is my nature?" 
                  Everything
                        in the universe has a nature, which means 
    limits as well as potentials, a truth well known by people who work
                      daily  
                      with the things of the world. Making pottery, for 
  example, involves more than telling the clay what to become. 
  The clay presses back on the potter's hands, telling her what it 
  can and cannot do--and if she fails to listen, the outcome will 
  be both frail and ungainly. Engineering involves more than 
  telling materials what they must do. If the engineer does not 
  honor the nature of the steel or the wood or the stone, his failure 
   will go well beyond aesthetics: the bridge or the building 
  will collapse and put human life in peril. 
                  The
                        human self also has a nature, limits as well as potentials. 
     If you seek vocation without understanding the material 
    you are working with, what you build with your life will be 
    ungainly and may well put lives in peril, your own and some 
    of those around you. "Faking it" in the service of high values 
    is no virtue and has nothing to do with vocation. It is an  
    ignorant, sometimes arrogant, attempt to override one's nature, 
    and it will always fail. 
                  Our
                        deepest calling is to grow into our own authentic self- 
    hood, whether or not it conforms to some image of who we 
    ought to be. As we do so, we will not only find the joy that every 
    human being seeks -- we will also find our path of authentic 
    service in the world. True vocation joins self and service, as 
    Frederick Buechner asserts when he defines vocation as "the 
    place where your deep gladness meets the world's deep need."3 
                  Buechner's
                        definition starts with the self and moves 
    toward the needs of the world: it begins, wisely, where vocation 
     begins--not in what the world needs (which is every-thing),
                      but  
                      in the nature of the human self, in what brings the 
  self joy, the deep joy of knowing that we are here on earth to 
  be the gifts that God created. 
                  Contrary
                        to the conventions of our thinly moralistic culture,  
    this emphasis on gladness and selfhood is not selfish. The 
    Quaker teacher Douglas Steere was fond of saying that 
    the ancient human question "Who am I?" leads inevitably 
    to the equally important question "Whose am I?" -- for there 
    is no selfhood outside of relationship. We must ask the ques- 
    tion of selfhood and answer it as honestly as we can, no mat- 
    ter where it takes us. Only as we do so can we discover the 
    community of our lives. 
                  As
                        I learn more about the seed of true self that was 
    planted when I was born, I also learn more about the ecosys- 
    tem in which I was planted -- the network of communal rela- 
    tions in which I am called to live responsively, accountably, 
    and joyfully with beings of every sort. Only when I know both 
    seed and system, self and community, can I embody the great 
    commandment to love both my neighbor and myself. 
                  JOURNEY
                      INTO DARKNESS 
                  Most
                      of us arrive at a sense of self and vocation only after
                      a 
  long journey through alien lands. But this journey bears no 
  resemblance to the trouble-free "travel packages" sold by the 
                      tourism
                      industry. It is more akin to the ancient tradition of 
                      pilgrimage -- "a transformative journey to a sacred center" full 
  of hardships, darkness, and peril.4 
                  In
                        the tradition of pilgrimage, those hardships are seen not 
                    as accidental but as integral to the journey itself. Treacherous 
    terrain, bad weather, taking a fall, getting lost -- challenges of 
    that sort, largely beyond our control, can strip the ego of the 
    illusion that it is in charge and make space for true self to 
    emerge. If that happens, the pilgrim has a better chance to 
    find the sacred center he or she seeks. Disabused of our illu- 
    sions by much travel and travail, we awaken one day to find 
    that the sacred center is here and now -- in every moment of 
    the journey, everywhere in the world around us, and deep 
    within our own hearts. 
                  But
                        before we come to that center, full of light, we must 
                    travel in the dark. Darkness is not the whole of the story -- 
    every pilgrimage has passages of loveliness and joy -- but it is 
    the part of the story most often left untold. When we finally 
    escape the darkness and stumble into the light, it is tempting 
    to tell others that our hope never flagged, to deny those long 
    nights we spent cowering in fear. 
                  The
                        experience of darkness has been essential to my com- 
    ing into selfhood, and telling the truth about that fact helps 
    me stay in the light. But I want to tell that truth for another 
    reason as well: many young people today journey in the dark, 
    as the young always have, and we elders do them a disservice 
    when we withhold
    the shadowy parts of our lives. When I was young,
     
    there were very few elders willing to talk about the 
darkness; most of them pretended that success was all they had 
ever known. As the darkness began to descend on me in my 
early twenties, I thought I had developed a unique and termi- 
nal case of failure. I did not realize that I had merely embarked 
on a journey toward joining the human race. 
                  The
                        story of my journey is no more or less important 
    than anyone else's. It is simply the best source of data I have 
    on a subject where generalizations often fail but truth may be 
    found in the details. I want to rehearse a few details of my trav- 
    els, and travails, extracting some insights about vocation as I 
    go. I do so partly as an offering of honesty to the young and 
    partly as a reminder to anyone who needs it that the nuances 
    of personal experience contain much guidance toward self- 
    hood and vocation. 
                  My
                        journey into darkness began in sunlit places. I grew 
    up in a Chicago suburb and went to Carleton College in 
    Minnesota, a splendid place where I found new faces to 
    wear -- faces more like my own than the ones I donned in high 
    school, but still the faces of other people. Wearing one of 
    them, I went from college neither to the navy nor to Madison 
    Avenue but to Union Theological Seminary in New York City, 
    as certain that the ministry was now my calling as I had been 
    a few years earlier about advertising and aviation. 
                  So
                        it came as a great shock when, at the end of my first 
    year, God spoke to me -- in the form of mediocre grades and 
    massive misery -- and informed me that under no conditions 
                  was
                  I to become an ordained leader in His or Her church. 
Always responsive to authority, as one was if raised in the fifties, 
I left Union and went west, to the University of California at 
Berkeley. There I spent much of the sixties working on a Ph.D. 
in sociology and learning to be not quite so responsive to 
authority. 
                  Berkeley
                        in the sixties was, of course, an astounding mix 
    of shadow and light. But contrary to the current myth, many 
    of us were less seduced by the shadow than drawn by the 
    light, coming away from that time and place with a lifelong 
    sense of hope, a feeling for community, a passion for social 
    change. 
                  Though
                        I taught for two years in the middle of graduate 
    school, discovering that I loved teaching and was good at it, 
    my Berkeley experience left me convinced that a university 
    career would be a cop-out. I felt called instead to work on "the 
    urban crisis." So when I left Berkeley in the late sixties -- 
    a friend kept asking me, "Why do you want to go back to 
    America?" -- I also left academic life. Indeed, I left on a white 
    horse (some might say a high horse), full of righteous indig- 
    nation about the academy's corruption, holding aloft the flam- 
    ing sword of truth. I moved to Washington, D.C., where I 
    became not a professor but a community organizer. 
                  What
                        I learned about the world from that work was the 
    subject of an earlier book.5 What I learned about vocation 
    is how one's values can do battle with one's heart. I felt 
    morally compelled to work on the urban crisis, but doing so 
                  went
                  against a growing sense that teaching might be my voca- 
tion. My heart wanted to keep teaching, but my ethics -- laced 
liberally with ego - -told me I was supposed to save the city. 
How could I reconcile the contradiction between the two? 
                  After
                        two years of community organizing, with all its finan- 
    cial uncertainties, Georgetown University offered me a faculty 
    post -- one that did not require me to get off my white horse 
    altogether: "We don't want you to be on campus all week long," 
    said the dean. "We want you to get our students involved in the 
    community. Here's a tenure-track position involving a mini- 
    mum of classes and no requirement to serve on committees. 
    Keep working in the community and take our students out 
    there with you." 
                  The
                        part about no committees seemed like a gift from 
    God, so I accepted Georgetown's offer and began involving 
    undergraduates in community organizing. But I soon found 
    an even bigger gift hidden in this arrangement. By looking 
    anew at my community work through the lens of education, I 
    saw that as an organizer I had never stopped being a teacher -- 
    I was simply teaching in a classroom without walls. 
                  In
                      fact, I could have done no other: teaching, I was com- 
  ing to understand, is my native way of being in the world. 
  Make me a cleric or a CEO, a poet or a politico, and teaching 
  is what I will do. Teaching is at the heart of my vocation and 
  will manifest itself in any role I play. Georgetown's invitation 
  allowed me to take my first step toward embracing this truth, 
  toward a lifelong exploration of "education unplugged." 
                  But even this way of reframing my work could not alter the 
fact that there was a fundamental misfit between the rough- 
and-tumble of organizing and my own overly sensitive nature. 
After five years of conflict and competition, I burned out. I was 
too thin-skinned to make a good community organizer -- my 
vocational reach had exceeded my grasp. I had been driven 
more by the "oughts" of the urban crisis than by a sense of true 
self. Lacking insight into my own limits and potentials, I had 
allowed ego and ethics to lead me into a situation that my soul 
could not abide. 
                  I
                      was disappointed in myself for not being tough enough 
                    to take the flak, disappointed and ashamed. But as pilgrims 
                    must discover if they are to complete their quest, we
                        are led to 
                    truth by our weaknesses as well as our strengths. I needed
                        to 
                    leave community organizing for a reason I might never
                        have 
                    acknowledged had I not been thin-skinned and burned-out:
                        as 
                    an organizer, I was trying to take people to a place
                        where I had 
                    never been myself -- a place called community. If I wanted
                        to 
                    do community-related work with integrity, I needed a
                        deeper 
                    immersion in community than I had experienced to that
                    point. 
                  Next > (pg.
                  22-36) 
                  Copyright ©2000
                        (San
                        Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass
                  Inc.)  
                    
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