The idiocy problem
“What an idiot I have been!”
This is something one perhaps thinks, increasingly, as one grows past the age when any of one’s mistakes are retrievable. It certainly is the case with moi. At first, one became acquainted with the “face-grabber.” This was something spontaneous, and could not be concealed, though with practice one learnt to disguise the indications. Much worse than moral lapses, or the commission of actual sins, were the mistakes that we found humiliating, but not exceptionally evil. Of course, it was not possible to humiliate oneself without committing some sort of sin, but witnesses were not inclined to condemn, if they had the option of laughing. This is how one should greet slippage on a banana peel. The trick is to laugh oneself, first, though a concussion might make this difficult.
More commonly, however, one tried to hide what one had done, because it was more significant, morally, than mere clumsiness. One prefers to display one’s idiocy over something that doesn’t matter. There need be no risible scandal as when, perhaps, more information is disclosed.
But humiliation can generally be avoided if a person is instinctively honest. Honesty requires humility, along with other painful virtues, which become less painful the more they are practiced. Too, when experience is obtained, or perhaps has been acquired by reading the instructions, one may actually reduce the number of one’s silly mistakes, or failures of charity. A child would be lucky to have a parent or other guardian who teaches him how to do this: to “fess up” easily, and voluntarily.
The larger category of stupid, dishonest, and habitual mistakes, though very costly to ourselves and to others, are not such as we are apt to confess. They are things that “everyone was doing,” and only now has been exposed as a wicked thing to do. For instance, one has voted for a Communist, a Nazi, or a central bank governor.