GIVING
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Giving
You see a needy person and you dip your hands into your
pocket. And you give.
You visit Mother Teresa’s Home; you are moved by the work
the nuns do and you decide to offer two days of your week to the cause.
Your neighbour’s son, weak in mathematics is in danger of
failing his class and you offer to give him tuitions – absolutely free.
At night you go to bed and say, like Mr. Jack Horner: what
a good boy am I!
And then neuroscientists like Jorge Moll and Jordan Grafman
go and spoil it all for you. They tell you that good works and charitable
donations are all a matter of neurology, connected to something called the
mesolimbic reward pathway. The
mesolimbic
pathway is one of the pathways
in the brain that carries the neurotransmitter dopamine from one part to
another. It is a primitive part of the brain that
usually jumps up in joy in response to pleasures such as food and sex. When
charitable people like you put the interests of others before your own by
making donations, the limbic pathway carries dopamine to the subgenual cortex.
And you end up feeling good.
So, Mr. Jack Horner, when you are being charitable or
altruistic, you are not being a good boy who is suppressing your own selfish
urges; you are actually tickling a part of the brain wired to give you
pleasure.
Food, sex and charity: they are all part of the same
hedonistic cluster in this pathway.
By that token, we would have to say that The Bill Gates
Foundation or Mother Teresa’s Homes, for that matter are nothing more than just
so much dopamine, rushing through the mesolimbic pathways of Mr. Gates and the
Blessed sister?
They did all that philanthropy and charity for their own
pleasure!
And then Mother Teresa was heard to have said, “Give till
it hurts.” What “hurt” was she talking about? It was all pleasure, if our
friends, Moll and Grafman have to be believed.
Before we strip philanthropy and charity of all their moral
and spiritual sheen, let me hasten to reassure you that the conclusions of the
neuroscientists are still mired in controversy. What they say is not yet
universally accepted.
Personally, however, I am not averse to accepting their
unholy conclusions as gospel truth, one that sits comfortably with divine
design. I am happy to look upon that mesolimbic reward pathway as an ingenious
system fashioned by the hand of the Lord as an incentive for us to do a rather
hard thing – to give with no expectation of visible reward.
Face it: giving is not easy. Trapped as we are in a largely
self-seeking mind and body, everything we do is for our own preservation,
comfort, gain and happiness. The time and energy we spend for others can be
seen by the selfish gene to be time and energy wasted, if we do not get
anything for ourselves in return.
It’s okay for me to give your college-going son free
tuitions if my wife tells me that he would make a nice catch for our
college-going daughter; or for my wife to spend time and money on making those
marzipan chocolates for my immediate boss just before increment time. Or what
about paying for that expensive, new statue of our church’s patron saint,
knowing that my name will be immortalized on a brass plate on the pedestal?
Giving in such instances is not just easy, it is attractive. It has visible
rewards that can be counted like currency notes. Like currency notes, however,
those rewards are finite; measurable. Giver and receiver can evaluate the
exchange value of the gift.
On the other hand, we have heard of virtual unrealities,
such as Father Damien, Vincent De Paul and in our own time, Mother Teresa and
of so many nameless young men and women who give up gainful periods of their
life to work along the borders of inhumanity in Africa, India and Ecuador
without expecting anything in return. You yourself have experienced moments
when you have seen people and situations crying out for the succour that you
sense only you can give. All thought and reasoning sink below the level of your
heartstrings and you find yourself giving without counting cost or reward. The
pleasure that you experience then cannot be measured in finite terms. And if
you stop to wonder about the infinity of this joyful experience, you may come
to that big and mystical realization that it was not you who were the giver.
You were just the courier. The real giver was the Source of all love. You were
picked for the job of delivering a small parcel of that infinite love.
True charity then, is what the Church would call agape in
action, the compelling force of a love that is
unconditional, self-sacrificing, active, and voluntary. The pleasure that you
receive from agape-prompted giving cannot be grasped by way of reason or good
sense. It would, in fact be viewed by many as folly or even madness. It is the
madness of a few, for as we can see, not many are gifted (or should we say
burdened?) with the genetics (or should we say spirituality?) of the
unconditional giver.
And so, I find in neuroscience’s pronouncements about
mesolimbic reward pathways and all that, a respectable scientific explanation
of your altruistic and charitable behaviour, enough at least to exempt you from
being silently regarded as either insane or eccentric.
Charity is kind, not mad.
Moll and Jordan Grafman's theory of the mesolimbic reward pathway may be as it may. The "feel good" effect connected with charitable work may be a matter of neurology. But whereas many of differing faith ideologies see a tangible reward bouncing back with any charitable action, in the Christian world, altruism is driven by the promise of salvation. This is despite the fact that the apostle Paul has warned the faithful in Ephesians 2: "For by grace are you saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast."
ReplyDeletePhilanthropists perhaps act out of a sense of social justice. On her dying bed, the mother of Bill Gates summoned the young man and among other things said to him: "Son, to whom much is given, much is expected." Thus we see the Gates Foundation creating change in Africa.
Ivan, I cannot but agree with you about the mystical realizzation - that you are just the courier. The real giver is the Source of all love. Robin