Think free and be free
The room is full of students of all ages and the debate
is centered on the topic of free thinkers.
"Think free and be free," I decide, as I
reflect on the topic under discussion, "But I need to know what others are
thinking about free thinkers too" and remain silent. .
"I am a free thinker!" a tall, dark haired man
states emphatically, to the others in the room. "I don't think the way
that normal people do."
"I wonder what he is really saying?" I ask
myself silently. "What is a free thinker to him?"
He has caught my attention if nothing else.
"Is this free thinking something that is archaic and
dredged out of antiquity or that which is new, different and more
contemporary?" a young woman asks, from the far side of the room.
I am quite certain that I have heard the expression free
thinker before, but I acknowledge that I have never thought too much about it.
I remain silent, deep into my own thoughts, as the discussion continues.
"I am a dinosaur," says someone else, in a
stern, solemn voice. I can not see who it, but suspect it is the older, gray
haired man, sitting at the back of the room.
I decide that I personally take exception to the idea of
being labeled a dinosaur. So does someone else who is a bit more vocal than I
tend to be.
"I am not a dinosaur; I am a human being, a real
live person with thoughts and feelings."
I cannot see who is speaking.
I am still adrift in my own thoughts.
"Why does this guy really think of himself as a
dinosaur?" I wonder. "Is he that old?" He certainly does
not appear old to me. As a matter of fact, for an older man he is young
looking.
"I am not locked into any traditional ways of
thinking."
"Here is a think-outside-the-box kind of
thinker," I realize. "Maybe there is hope for him yet?"
I am still temporarily locked into my own thoughts.
"Pay attention," I tell myself, even though I
know that I would rather be out on my bike.
"Freedom of thought is a basic, universal human
right, essential to survival."
The long-winded discussion continues and I just listen,
but now I am practicing active listening. I commend my self for doing that.
"Anyone who has any intelligence will be a free
thinker!"
"Free thinkers can get themselves into a lot of
trouble, very quickly!"
"Free thinking? What is that anyhow? I still don't
understand the concept."
I quietly ponder the meaning and signification of free
thinkers because now I am beginning to wonder what they really are. I see that
I am not the only one who is curious.
"Free thinkers? I have never even heard of such a
thing! Who are these free thinkers? Do we have any? If we do, where are
they?"
"Free thinkers, those are the troublemakers of our
society! Everyone else conforms; non-conformity causes problems! Conformity is
the norm of the masses!"
"This argument is beginning to get a little
heated," I decide and back off from the group. I sense that this might get
unruly.
"I agree. Free thinkers don't abide by the
rules."
"Well, who on earth ever said that there were any
rules for free thinkers? Don't they break all of the rules?"
"What about these free thinkers? If there are any
rules, you tell me, who wrote the rules? Where did they write them down? Can we
see them? Who is going to enforce them?"
"Free thinkers are not welcome in today's
world!"
"There is no such a thing as a free thinker because
we are all in some kind of bondage to norms!"
"Maybe you are," I think to myself. I know that
I am not and I am beginning to be glad that I have not said one word, so far.
"Hey, where is all of this free thinking stuff
coming from anyhow? Where is it heading? What would happen if everyone was a
free thinker? Who would conform? No one! Then, we would be in big trouble,
wouldn't we?"
"Stop yelling!" I tell him, silently.
I keep my head down. No way am I entering into this
argument.
"Hey, I am not at all comfortable with this! Can you
define what a free thinker is so that we all know what we are talking
about?"
"Well, it is like this. The Bible says that there is
"one in a thousand". The free thinkers tend to be the leaders who
challenge the norms of the masses."
"Unlike dominoes that fall over, 'diminoes' stand
the test of time because their thinking is based on truth," I realize, but
still do not say anything. I don't feel like getting hammered over the head for
speaking out at this point in the discussion. "They are certainly not
going to be any of the ones that lean on each other and fall down together in
the end."
"Does the Bible have a record of free thinkers? How
about history?"
"What I would like to know is how to awaken the free
thinkers. How can we elicit their free thinking? How many people are capable of
being free thinkers, do you think?"
"I say, yes, no, maybe so, to the possibility of
free thinkers. At least, we ought to allow the possibility!"
"I agree," I decide, silently and nod my head
in agreement, as I wonder if I might be a free thinker. I would like to be one.
It might have some merit.
"Yes, but don't you think that free thinkers are all
bound to societal, cultural, moral and ethical rules or laws, at least to some
degree?"
"The human mind has its own curious nature. It can
think freely, if it chooses to do so. Man does not have to be a free
thinker."
"Do you think that we use our minds that way? There
is always the option to do so, the possibility that we can be free thinkers. We
have the option, right? If not, if we don't do that maybe we should ask why
not?"
"Maybe it all comes down to the 'nay sayers' versus
the 'yeah sayers'?"
I continue to reflect upon what they are saying.
"Maybe the not-free thinkers are saying no to free
thinking, while the free thinkers are saying yes to free thinking. How would we
ever know?"
"These free thinking men and women, and it sounds
like they are people who are curious by nature, maybe a bit analytic too? Like
writers or poets? They get everyone thinking somehow, by what they write.
Otherwise things might get boring."
"Maybe there is a place for free thinkers in the
world after all, right up front or foremost among people teaching, as though
they were not teaching at all?"
"Maybe they become the playmates of the world,
accept the new challenges, find solutions, report on things like journalists
do? Yes, maybe there is a place for free thinkers."
"How about as composers and artists?" I wonder.
"Would they be considered to be free thinkers?"
As I continue to reflect, my own curiosity about free
thinkers is rising.
"This might be a good topic to do some research
on."
"I think a free thinker forms an opinion on things
based upon reason. It is not necessarily under any kind of designated
authority."
"Want to know what think? I think that the not-free
thinkers are wallowing in bondage. They are the critical or hyper-critical
people who are locked into boxes. It is sort of a Pandora's box or maybe a
Jack-in-the-box kind of syndrome."
"Maybe silence is the norm for free thinkers because
if they speak out, they will get silenced? Silence can be enforced by
authority. Maybe that is why they write instead?"
"The future does not lie with the not-free thinkers.
They may not survive the world of change that we live in. You have to become
free thinkers in order to survive, in this day and age."
"I am starting to agree," I realize, but still
deep in thought, I wonder if there is one free thinker in the midst of everyone
present.
"Free thinking involves a decision making process of
some kind. It requires some faculty of judgment and integrity. It has ethical
criteria with moral and legal obligations. Maybe it is an exemplary teaching
role of some kind? What do you think?"
"I suspect that free thinkers are free in other
ways, also. Their survival is guaranteed. My guess is that they speak quite
clearly in poetry and prose. Maybe in their music and artwork too? Or maybe
they only speak in riddles? Who knows?"
"This is sort of like the pessimist versus optimist
argument, but in the end it is the idealist that wins. The pessimist and the
optimist have to try to live up to the ideal established by the idealist."
"Are we all dinosaurs or dreamers?" I wonder.
"Think free and be free."
I decide that I had better not get openly involved in the
free thinkers discussion. I am too busy doing my own free thinking to do
that.
Maybe I will write about it in my reflections for the
year 2008 AD. I will call what I write "Think free and be free."

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