Our Dark Side
Posted August 22, 2008
A commentary by Sean Yarbrough
"Get in touch with your dark side," urges Toyota in an ad
for the Matrix VCAM.
"Go ahead, indulge your dark side," Nestle says of its dark
chocolate caramel Treasures.
Marketing experts know there's something strangely appealing about
the dark side of human nature—and they are capitalizing on it.
Goth and Halloween
One example of this strategy is the successful promotion of Goth characters
such as Emily
the Strange that are rapidly gaining popularity with preteens. As Karyn
M. Peterson of Playthings magazine
reports, "Fuzzy zombie teddy bears wielding
weapons, cuddly-yet-creepy skeletal pets, designer dolls with ghostly
death-mask faces—toys and collectibles like these that embrace dark
(and even macabre) themes...are increasingly finding younger and younger
fans."
Another example is the annual marketing blitz surrounding Halloween. According
to Businessweek, "Halloween
is the second-biggest holiday behind Christmas in home-decorating sales,
and the sixth-biggest retail holiday for overall sales." Between
all the parties, TV shows and special events that accompany this holiday,
themes of fear and death have now become normalized as entertaining traditions.
Desensitizing games
Does popularizing evil desensitize us to the true nature of the human
heart?
A 2007 Iowa
State University study of video game players found that even brief
exposure to violent media has a measurably desensitizing effect. The
authors of this study expressed the following concerns regarding the
way popular media is presented to the public over our lifespan:
"Children receive high doses of media violence. It initially is
packaged in ways that are not too threatening, with cute cartoon-like characters,
a total absence of blood and gore, and other features that make the overall
experience a pleasant one, arousing positive emotional reactions that are
incongruent with normal negative reactions to violence. Older children
consume increasingly threatening and realistic violence, but the increases
are gradual and always in a way that is fun. In short, the modern entertainment
media landscape could accurately be described as an effective systematic
violence desensitization tool."
Desensitization often starts when we are very young, whether through the
surrounding culture and related media or via family experiences. This may
lead to a decreased appreciation—or even subtle acceptance—of
the evil and all too typical violence that permeates the world such as:
- The attack that occurred in Beijing just after the opening ceremony
of the Olympics.
- The practice of slavery—still
a problem all over the globe.
- Terrorist plots to overthrow entire national or religious cultures.
Cure for a sick heart
How dangerous is our world to us? The common thread among these and other
evils we see today is a sick heart—and we're all vulnerable
to infection.
"Who can understand the human heart? There is nothing else so deceitful;
it is too sick to be healed" (Jeremiah 17:9, Good News Bible).
God says we all have the capacity to deceive ourselves into thinking good
is evil, and evil is good. That's a frightening revelation. Given
the right circumstances, we have the ability to commit evil and justify
doing so. If we desensitize to the point that we can no longer recognize
evil, is it possible that we, too, could become agents of evil instead
of just spectators?
Our Creator warns us to carefully guard the thoughts and motives of our
heart to avoid falling prey to self-deception. With His help and careful
vigilance as to what we allow into our minds, we can prevent the dark side
of the human heart from controlling our destiny.
To find out more about how to overcome your dark side, read "The
Battle for Your Mind." VT
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About the Author
Sean Yarbrough lives with his wife, Kristin, and daughter, Katie, in Tampa, Florida. He works as a home health occupational therapist and is active in the United Church of God. |
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