Okay. So. I don’t know what to write today, even more so than usual.
It’s Tuesday, of course. Though I guess there’s really no “of course” about it; I mean, it could be any day in principle, but it happens to be Tuesday, and I’m up and about, going through various stages of heading to the office as I write this.
At the end of the work day, I will head back to the house and prepare to do it all over again. Lather, rinse, repeat. I won’t say “as needed”, because I think it’s probably rather nebulous just how necessary these daily repetitions really are. Certainly neither the universe nor civilization depends upon me doing any of the things I do.
I suppose that “work” is weakly dependent upon me, in that if I suddenly just stopped coming, they would have to find someone else to do what I do, or divide things up among those already there or something. That’s not such a big deal, of course. It happens all the time.
There may be a few people who look forward to my blog every day, though it would be pretty arrogant to consider them “dependent” upon it. I would much prefer for people to be “dependent” upon, or at least to look forward to, my fiction. It would be easier to keep writing it if I thought more than one person would actually read my stories, and that maybe people would even tell me what they thought of them*.
I suppose that sort of thing might seem fairly trivial in the face of various events happening in the nation and the world, but on the other hand, those things are trivial in themselves. There is certainly no good reason for any of them other than that human nature‒while possessing functionally limitless potential‒is almost always prone to default to the level of screaming monkeys.
Each political moment of the world feels so…well…momentous to the people going through it, but these kinds of things have arisen and passed away over and over throughout history. Probably most such happenings are even outside of history, parallel to it if you will, because many of them are not even noticed beyond their immediate time and place, even by some of the people who experience them.
They are all rather laughable in their self-important yet ephemeral character.
I don’t know why I even notice, let alone care. I guess maybe it’s because the human race does have such potential for greatness, for the creation of beauty‒by whatever criteria you might measure beauty‒and for making the world a place that’s better than it is in every reasonable way. Yet, they do not have the intellectual and moral humility to realize how great they could make things. Ironically, if people were able to stop thinking of everything as being about them, whoever they are, they could participate in a world that could easily be better not just for everyone else, but for them as well.
Of course, it’s honestly difficult not to knee jerk one’s responses to reality as if it were about oneself. Meditation can help, if only by dissolving the “ego” and decreasing the tendency toward reflexive belief in the inner homunculus.
It would be nice if Earth had its own Surak who succeeded in convincing humanity that calmness, mindfulness, and rationality are not merely options but probably among the best ways to secure a beneficent future for Earth and life and intelligence. That’s assuming that this is indeed true, which I strongly suspect it is, but do not know for certain.
Wouldn’t it be remarkable if, instead of training our children to believe in the literal truth of fairy tales that are hundreds to thousands of years old (and benighted even for their times of origin), extorting their behavior and “belief” with threats of Hell (or the equivalent), we encouraged our children to be mindful, to be curious, to be patient, to recognize their fallibility, but at the same time, as part of that, to recognize their potential to do truly remarkable and wonderful things.
But left to their own devices‒as they all always are, since even the Powers That Be are just other naked house apes, not significantly different than themselves‒people tend to choose the monkey way. Or, rather, they go that way by default, never recognizing that they have a choice.
Only if you recognize that you are a monkey can you really, deliberately choose to become something greater.
Only by recognizing your fallibility can you begin to succeed at deliberately chosen and often amazing things.
Only by recognizing that you are not special can you truly steer yourself toward doing things that are special.
Okay, all those “only” beginnings to the above homilies are presumptuous in the extreme, but they make for better quotables than more restrained language would provide.
I’m not a fan of rhetoric‒if you need clever wordplay to convince others of your points, perhaps your points aren’t all that good‒and one of the reasons I’m not a fan is that it is just so damn tempting.
Oh, well. This is all stupid anyway. Sorry.

*No trolling though. I don’t mind reasonable criticism, especially if I find it convincing, but when people are assholes just for the “fun” of it, I see no problem with them being dealt with as one would a troll in an RPG or a book or a movie. Imagine how much more pleasant the world would be if all people prone to trollish behavior were turned to stone, or barring that, turned to worm food and ash.





