One of the most discussed chapters in Hunting Magic Eels comes from Part 1 and is entitled "Welcome to the Ache." In that chapter, I make a connection between our mental health crisis and our loss of transcendence. In Part 2 of the book, in the chapter "The Good Catastrophe," I discuss the mental health benefits of transcendence, describing our need to adopt an "eccentric" posture toward life. For example, as I describe in the book, our mattering and existential significance have this eccentric shape. Self-transcendent emotions such as gratitude also display this eccentricity.
In the new chapter "Live Your Beautiful Life" I deepen these points, bringing teleology into the discussion about our mental health problems. I open the chapter with a story:
“Do you want to live a beautiful life?”
Many years ago, a student of mine, I’ll call him William, came to me in the midst of some faith struggles. The “New Atheists” were all the rage back then. You might remember them. Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris. Their book titles were dropping from the sky like metaphysical bombs: The God Delusion, The End of Faith, and God is Not Great. William had read these books and found their arguments persuasive and unsettling. So we met for coffee and talked about all the issues he had questions about: Evolution, the violence in the Old Testament, the problem of evil. It was a lovely conversation, and I tried to share the best of the Christian theological tradition in thinking about these questions.
Having tried my best to answer the many questions William had posed, toward the end of the conversation I asked William if I could ask him a question. “Of course,” William agreed. So, I asked, “William, do you want to live a beautiful life?”
We live in a hope sick world. We see this hope sickness everywhere. Hope is hard to come by, rare and diminishing. And has hope wanes, human flourishing wanes. Personally and collectively. Our emotional, social, and political lives are visibly sick, and much of our suffering is due to a loss of hope.