This is something that's been bouncing around in my head a lot lately, and this forum seems like the appropriate place to post it, given the theme.
Has anyone here ever read "The Necessity of Chivalry" by C.S. Lewis? I read it a long time ago, but the gist of it was the need for the Lancelot in the modern world. The essay discusses those who can go into the field and be ferocious, but cannot turn that ferocity off anywhere else. On the flip side are those who are meek in their daily life, and remains so on the field. The Lancelot is the one who is ferocious on the field, but "meek" in the hall. He is the hero, the chivalrous. In other words, the man who can stand up for himself, and can live his life boldly, and at the same time be at peace with the world. (and of course, when I say "man", I'm talking about "mankind", not the gender) I recall there being a thread on myArmoury on this essay a couple years ago, in fact.
In many cases, it sounds cliche, and even corny. But this has very much summed up my philosophy on how to live one's life, or at least it has been over the past several years. One of the points that Lewis made in his essay was that the traits are not purely innate; they are trained. If you train a society to be ferocious, this is dangerous because you train them to be aggressive without compassion. But likewise, if you train a society to remain meek, this is also dangerous, because you train them to turn the cheek until there are no cheeks left to turn. You train them to hurt themselves by allowing others to hurt them. It is only by learning to take control of one's own life, to seize it and take charge, that you can guide your own fate. And it is only by tempering this with compassion and empathy that you can take that control and make it into something worth living for.
Why has this been on my mind lately? I've been teaching at VAF for seven years now, come May. (Good lord, has it been so long?) In that time I've taught a lot of people, and roughly 50% of those people have been children. Some of them have even stuck around long enough that I've seen them grow up quite a bit. Some of those kids come into my beginning class as meek: They are afraid of sticking out. They are afraid of people seeing them. They are afraid to say what is on their mind. They do what other kids tell them, even if the know they shouldn't. Likewise, there are other kids who are ferocious: They know what they want, and don't like it when they don't get it. They'll cheat at fencing if they think they can get away with it. You tell them not to do something, and they'll do it the second they think you aren't looking. They'll make fun of other kids to look big if they think no adults can hear them. And in the seven years I've been teaching, I've seen a huge number of them change. In my case, it was the act of taking fencing/historical swordsmanship that forced them into the position where they had to compromise with other people, but it could have just as easily been any other activity. But the activity alone isn't what makes the change: It's the guidance the kids get. I meet parents all the time who either 1) Let their kids get away with murder, or 2) Put the fear of god into their kids at any chance. And unfortunately many of these parents don't understand why their kids don't "get it". It's because they don't yet know any better. I can only hope that I can make a positive influence on these kids by showing them that, no, they can't get whatever they want, but yes, they do have to be responsible for themselves. They can't just stand around hoping partners will come to pick them for fencing: they have to go get their own partner themselves. At the same time, they can't tell other kids what to do, they have to treat other human beings like other human beings. And sometimes the really amazing thing is that I don't really have to do that much... the kids start doing it on their own. They start being the Lancelots, and what's even more, they start encouraging their peers to be this way. It's sometimes amazing.
And it was only recently that I started seeing this as a form of modern chivalry. I think when I started getting into my teens that I stopped using words like "chivalry" because I felt it couldn't exist in modern times as it did in previous eras, that its concept was designed for a time period that had different ideals. Many of the ideals of chivalry, in fact, go contrary to modern sensibilities. But the truth is, we don't have to live chivalry by other standards: We have to live it by our own standards, just as we do with everything in our lives. And in that respect, "modern chivalry" really is something that we need today, otherwise we are nothing but lambs and lions, shadows and bursts.
Anyway, that's my little "morning musing". I hope I don't just sound like someone complaining about parenting, because that would mean I'm getting old.