Power: Sought by Many, Obtained by Few, Destructive for All

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Power is an illusion that is sought by many, obtained by few and destructive for all. Since the dawn of man, power has been an established mentality carried within his psyche. It has been used as a way for man to define himself, his place within this world and the place of everything else that surrounds him. Man has ignorantly assumed himself and his race to be the possessors and wielders of power while disregarding the truths and true definition of it. The consequences of his disregard have been detrimental to man, yet, he has failed to correct his faulty rationalizations and understandings of it. Power has built up and destroyed many men and will continue to do so until man begins to understand that power is an illusion in life and a thing that cannot be possessed.
The definition of power is that of control: someone or something can or is being controlled by another. Man is able to control himself, others and even part of his environment, that much is true. However, the control man possesses is limited and not that of the full definition of power. Man is never completely able to control himself, his body can and will react automatically in manners that he is not able to control. Man may be able to control another man to a point, but, he will never have complete control over another. Each individual man has his own thoughts and feelings, these aspects about him can be manipulated by others yet, not fully controlled. Man has attempted and succeeded with limited control of his environment, but has experienced substantial consequences from it. The nature of the environment does not recognize nor does it adhere to the power of control of a single element or person. The environment sustains itself through cycles that are dependent on...

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...t excites the human spirit. The human mind can envision boundless possibilities under its interpretation of power. What the human mind and spirit fail to recognize is that power is simply something that is unable to be obtained. It is a factitious belief that if sought, can cause significant consequences for the seeker. Instead of man continuing to delude himself with his superstition of power, he would serve himself better by recalling the plights of those before him who fell during their quest for it. Man needs to begin to understand how all things of this world work together; nothing is completely controlled by another, but is ultimately both profited by and dependent on each other.

Works Cited

Heaney, Seamus. Beowulf. W.W> Norton & Company, 2000.
Lewis, C.S. The Abolition Of Man. Harper Collins, 1944.
The Unsettling of America. Publishers Group West, 1977.

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