When I was a freshman in high school we had to write an
essay in order to get into Honors English the following year. The topic was: “How humans want habit and
routine to help them in life.” I
remember hating this topic.
I hated the idea that
the teacher assumed we would agree with the premise that we want life built
around routine. I didn’t. Like Thoreau I wanted to live deliberately,
not like the drones I saw who would sleepwalk through life. I fancied myself a non-conformist. I saw all of our school traditions (rallies,
retreats, dances, etc) as blind devotion to a thoughtless system. We did things because we had always done them
that way.
I could even see that in everyday life. We went to church on Sunday because that’s
just what we did. We went to the mall
afterwards because that just what we did.
That life seemed to lack so much spontaneity and excitement. Shouldn’t I want to go to Church? Shouldn’t I want to be excited about
homecoming at school? If I wasn’t, was I
not being a hypocrite for participating when I didn’t feel it?
Anyway, that’s what my 13-year-old self thought. Now that I have gotten older and the harsh
hands of experience battered me around, I can now see more of the wisdom I
missed when I was younger.
Habits are important.
In fact, for the great philosopher Aristotle, they are everything. Most
moral philosophies focus on actions: “Is it morally okay to do x?” “Is it morally wrong to do y?”
Aristotle was less interested in the action but on the
person. For him, your actions only
matter inasmuch as they affect you as a person.
And the way that action affects you is by increasing or decreasing in
you a habit.
Habits aren’t onetime events in our lives. They shape our lives. Think about a nice small patch of fresh
dirt. If you pour water over it, it will
splash all around the area. But next
time, take your finger and trace a path down the middle. Then do it a few dozen more times. Soon you will see that you have carved a
depressed path. Pour the water over the
area again and you will find that much of it collects into the depression and
flows from one end to the other.
When we do something habitually, our lives take shape around
it. We carve out our pathways to
action. Like the water, the more we’ve
built up a habit the more we can direct our actions without thinking about it.
My wife and I have dinner every night together. A while ago, we happen to have some cookies
left over from a party. So I had some
for desert after dinner. And then I did
it again the next night. And the
next. Now, I don’t even think about it,
but after dinner I assume I’m going to eat a cookie. If I eat dinner and I don’t get a cookie
after, I get sad. It isn’t even that I’m
hungry. It’s that habit has directed me
towards it and if I don’t, then I feel like I’m missing something.
And good habits are supposed to make life easier. When I was in high school, I ate fast food whenever
I could. I love McNuggets. I would buy them by the 20-pack. I remember once my brother and sister and I
went there and bought 40 nuggets and just scarffed them down. But then for a few months I stopped going to
McDonald’s. For the first few weeks I won’t lie, I was
jonesing for some of that McGoodness to enter my McBelly. But then after a few months, not only did I
resist the desire, but I found that I had completely lost my taste for it.
Habits have that power.
In morality, they are especially potent.
St. Francis was someone who was very attached to his material
things. But then after having a
conversion to the Lord, he began giving things away. By the constant habit, charity became normal
for him and greed in his soul atrophied and died.
If a bank truck dumped a pile of untraceable gold onto the
street in front of us and no one was around, many of us would be tempted to
take it for ourselves. I’m not saying we
would do it, but we would sure have heck feel the strong pull of gold’s
luster.
Not Francis. He
wouldn’t think twice about returning it to its rightful owner. Why?
Because the habit of honesty and non-material attachment had directed
his thoughts, feelings, and actions to that good end. It wasn’t a struggle for him, because of the
habit.
Human beings are broken.
We have an attraction to things that are bad for us. We constantly wrestle with our pride, greed,
lust, anger, laziness, vanity, and gluttony.
And we are so weak we often give in to these temptations. Good habits are like a solid cast around a broken
leg. The cast is a framework that
creates an environment in the leg that allows it to be healed correctly. Bad habits are like bad casts. If the cast is not straight and aligned, the
bone will malform and weaken the person.
I have a lot of bad habits, and my life is poorer for it.
But I have also tried to build up good habits. Particularly, I have tried to do this in my
prayer life.
I don’t know what prayer is like for you, but for me it
takes a lot of effort. I get distracted
so easily and I often turn to some distraction before I turn to the Lord. So with the help of my wife, I have set a cast
of habitual prayer to help set straight my soul.
Every morning I fall on my knees and thank God for the new
day and for dying on the cross for my sins.
I then surrender my day to the Holy Spirit. This is followed by prayers for blessings on
those who are in special need.
On the way to work I pray the Chaplet of Divine Mercy. Before I arrive I call my wife and we pray
the Our Father, Hail Mary, Glory Be and the intercession of the saints.
At work I take 15-30 minutes of chapel time.
In the evening, my wife and I pray the Rosary, the Chaplet
for the Unborn, and the novena to Sts. Ann and Joachim.
And then in the evening I do an examination of conscience.
Looking back on what I have just written, I feel embarrassed. People may think I am trying to brag over how
much time I spend in prayer. But that is
not the point. I’m writing all of this
out not say that I am holy, but to show you how much I need to do to my soul it
get it in even semi-decent shape.
In all honesty, of all that time in prayer, I might have a
good 5 minutes truly with the Lord. As I
wrote, I get distracted so easily. I’ll
be in the middle of praying the rosary and start thinking about writing my review
for Argo and how Ben Affleck would be a good Batman like my blog poll said,
which reminds me that I should check on how the current poll is doing so I can
write my next article, but only after I finish grading the papers that my students
turned in, even though they don’t use spell-check, which I would have if I had
it back when I was in high school, but I only had a Magnavox
word-processor/printer that only worked some of the time… And the next thing I
know, the rosary is over.
So if my mind wanders, does that mean I should stop praying? No.
The only reason I have even the smallest spark of a spiritual life is
because the habits, these routines, have made it possible for me to experience
God in my prayer life. Maybe you are
different and can spontaneously enter into union with God. I need all the help I can get.
Good habits hold things together. Most adults are not friends with their
buddies from high school. I am. I have friends that I have known since grade
school, high school, and college days.
One of the ways we’ve been able to hold everything together is that every
Sunday, we get together for dinner.
Sometimes it’s that simple.
If someone’s out of town we play Halo or Starcraft or
something once a week. Each appointment
is like another dash of the needle and thread that sews the fabric of our lives
together.
Of course habit is not enough.
I should build habits of charity, faith, generosity,
temperance, etc not for the sake of simply building up the habits. I build up the habits so that it becomes
easier to give love. St. Teresa the
Little Flower understood that while habits create a solid framework for action,
are works only take on eternal meaning if we act with great love.
And that is habit’s true force.
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