Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Ancient spiritual affliction leads to modern despair
You've worked hard, helped others, loved God, gone to worship services on a regular basis, prayed, read the scriptures, lived a decent life. But it all seems so pointless now -- why bother trying to be faithful, anyway? It doesn't seem to make any difference; the world is in as terrible a shape as it ever was, and nothing you can do will make it better.
I know I sometimes feel that way. Am I depressed? Maybe not, says Kathleen Norris. Maybe what I'm experiencing is acedia.
Acedia is an old spiritual affliction. At its Greek root, it means the absence of care. In personal terms, it means refusing to care, or even that you can't care. Acedia was a bane to ancient monks and hermits, who considered it one of the greatest threats to monastic living. Once a monk succumbed to the notion that his efforts at daily prayer and contemplation were futile, life loomed like a prison sentence, day after day of nothingness.
Evagrius, who lived in the fourth century, experienced acedia. It "makes it seem that the sun hardly moves, if at all, and that the day is 50 hours long," he wrote. John Climacus, a sixth-century monk, said it led to a "slackness of the mind" and a "hostility to vows taken."
Few of us are monks, but we can all relate to times when life feels like we are swimming through oatmeal -- times when God feels a million miles away and it's just too hard to keep going. We want to pray, worship or just carry on our normal daily activities, but we are filled with apathy, torpor and despair. Life, it seems, just doesn't feel worth living.
In her new book, Acedia & Me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life, Norris writes about her own struggles with the affliction, which left her listless and apathetic.
"I think of acedia as the great disconnector," she says, adding that, for her, it was the "profound indifference" that was really debilitating.
The terrible thing about it is that even though you know you have it, you can't stop it, she says. "You know the pain is there, yet can't rouse yourself to give a damn."
Acedia makes people feel disconnected from people, relationships and communities.
"Anything that helps you connect with the human race somehow is stripped away," she adds. "Anything you can think of to do to help you get out of it, you go, 'Nah, I don't want to do that.' "
It's not just religious people who can suffer from acedia, she adds, noting that "anyone whose work is self-motivated, and that would be any writer or artist," can experience it.
Acedia is also a danger for relationships, making marriage seem oppressive and meaningless. "All those things that acedia will feed on are going to happen in a marriage sooner or later," says Norris. "Anybody who makes a lifetime commitment is going to face it."
How can people overcome acedia? For Norris, author of books such as The Cloister Walk, Dakota: A Spiritual Geography and Amazing Grace: A Vocabulary of Faith, writing this book about acedia was a way out. She also turns to the Lord's Prayer when she feels it approaching. It reminds her that "the life in which we ought to be interested is daily life... our Lord tells us to pray for today, and so he prevents us from tormenting ourselves about tomorrow."
Other ways to deal with it, she says, include going to worship services, connecting with others, or just carrying on with the normal things of life -- even when those are the last things you really want to do.
"The ancient remedies are prayer and psalmody," she says. "Prayer, fasting, tears. That sounds kind of weird to modern people, but I think refusing to disconnect and maybe staying in this place that you have chosen: your job, a marriage, a monastery, whatever it is. Saying, 'No, I'm going to stay here. This is where I've made my stand. The grass is not greener. I am going to remain faithful to my commitments.' "
For a long time, the concept of acedia was lost to western culture. It was subsumed into the sin of sloth, as opposed to a sense of profound existential indifference.
But today the ancient wisdom about acedia seems to be making a comeback. For Norris, this is a welcome turn of events; if people understand what is happening to them, they can identify it and combat it.
"I am convinced that the word returned to us because we needed it again," she says.
jdl562000@yahoo.com
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition May 17, 2009 B9
- Rate this

-
-
We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high. If you thought it was well written, do the same. If it doesn’t meet your standards, mark it accordingly.
You can also register and/or login to the site and join the conversation by leaving a comment.
Rate it yourself by rolling over the stars and clicking when you reach your desired rating. We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high.
The comment period for this story has ended.
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to Faith
-
Working in Winnipeg
A close-up look at the jobs people do and why they do them
-
Helping Haiti
Where to make donations
-
Open Secrets
Red River students mine government data banks
-
Ski with WFP
Register here to ski Asessippi with the Winnipeg Free Press
-
Random Acts of Kindness
Your encounters with goodness
Poll
Most Popular
- Murder charges against top CFB Trenton officer leave military community reeling
- Happy 111th birthday to oldest Manitoban
- Should have been listening, Tiger
- Checking out sex show all part of journalist's job
- Prominence proving costly to Hall: friend
- Body found in Delta airplane wheel well after arriving in Tokyo from New York
- No support for Winnipeg's 'Homeless Hero' in days before attack: stepdaughter
- Pilot burnt plane as signal before walking to shore
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Larger garbage carts may become available
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Woman arrested in Faron Hall beating
- Pilot burnt plane as signal before walking to shore
- Storm warning issued
- Built-in text messages ruined life, says city man
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- City streets very slippery; several vehicles involved in crashes
- 26 cats too many, woman told
- Car stolen at gunpoint recovered
- Police apologize for not looking into woman's complaint against gynecologist
- Guns N' Roses show a massive rock 'n' roll spectacle
- Extended family pulls together
- Two dead after crash on Bishop Grandin
- Water pressure drop caused by power outage: city
- Avoid Perimeter: RCMP
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Winter storm warnings issued for Winnipeg, southern Manitoba
- Woman arrested in Faron Hall beating
- Pilot burnt plane as signal before walking to shore
- Cheap Vancouver rentals, if tiny's OK
- Take one downtown, fill it with people
- Larger garbage carts may become available
- No support for Winnipeg's 'Homeless Hero' in days before attack: stepdaughter
- Prominence proving costly to Hall: friend
- Bad cocaine results in grave illness, hospitalization
- Trappers suing for $64M
- More police cars for suburbs: committee
- Happy 111th birthday to oldest Manitoban
- Checking out sex show all part of journalist's job
- Footprints in snow lead to stolen goods
- 300 pounds of marijuana found in semi
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- Sick days spike during blizzard
- Woman arrested in Faron Hall beating
- Brutality not clear on tape: experts
- 26 cats too many, woman told
- Car stolen at gunpoint recovered
- Zoning memorandums to cost sellers up to $180
- Shielding buyers, or 'cash grab'?
- 300 pounds of marijuana found in semi
- Girl not a bully, shouldn't have been suspended, says mom
- Arrest tape kills auto-theft case
- Don't dock students for missing deadlines: NDP
- Two dead after crash on Bishop Grandin
- Alleged mobsters seek to stay
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- RCMP investigating after video shows police beating suspect
- U.S. fighter slams Canada's 'Third World' health system
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- Happy 111th birthday to oldest Manitoban
- Steamy weekend
- Soft drinks hike pancreatic cancer risk: study
- Iran playing its hand
- Friendly credit union to open first city branch
- Real-estate association's rules challenged by federal competition watchdog
- Checking out sex show all part of journalist's job
- Jobs figures a bit too bright?
- There's price to pay for guaranteed returns
- Pilot burnt plane as signal before walking to shore
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Cat came back: 14 years later
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- Manitoba Merv predicts an early spring
- Zoning memorandums to cost sellers up to $180
- 26 cats too many, woman told
- A super-lab to fight superbugs
- Hutterite biography to debut despite legal chill
- Rude rowdies ruin Earle concert
- Pilot burnt plane as signal before walking to shore
- 'Tough guys' wanted as film extras
- Nylons still smooth as silk
- Two dead after crash on Bishop Grandin
- Bath & Body Works coming to St. Vital
- Cat came back: 14 years later
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Guns N' Roses show a massive rock 'n' roll spectacle
- Winnipeg desserts are a piece of cake
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- VIDEO: A winter wonderland?
PREVIOUS

0 Comments