“Human beings
sometimes falter under pressure. Pilots crash and divers drown. Under the glare
of competition, basketball players cannot find the basket and golfers cannot
find the pin.”
“We live in an age
obsessed with success, with documenting the myriad ways by which talented
people overcome challenges and obstacles.”
“We have to learn that
sometimes a poor performance reflects not the innate ability of the performer
but the complexion of the audience; and that sometimes a poor test score is the
sign not of a poor student but of a good one.”
(The Art of Failure)
“It's kind of like going to the pharmacist, complaining of having
Mystery AIDS, the flu, and erectile dysfunction, and getting one single pill to
cure them all, but the pill is actually no pills at all.”
“Going a little
furthur I’d say it's a duty to think actively about how we can use medicine and
technology to expand the limits of our knowledge, to define new paradigms of
information that will help everyone deal with an explosion of knowledge that no
one in the world knows how to deal with.”
“All of this, of
course, is one person's perspective. Your mileage will certainly vary
drastically.”
(How I Hacked My Brain with Adderall)
The Definition of
Success
We
spin, endlessly, infinitely, and seemingly limitlessly. The world, filled with
beings that possess the ability to talk and walk, ought to have some form of
clear disambiguation when it comes to the end result of an action. In said
action, competition is produced when two people want to judge which action wins
out over the other; rivalry is elementary. Pit these people against each other
to produce the idea of success, explicit or implied. How do you judge a person
for how well they do? The status of a product produced is relative; because it’s
not finite, no single person can discern how successful a particular thing or action is.
I grasp
things differently. When I was about eleven years old, I understood what
failure was completely. I was taking a vocabulary quiz with other students in
my class and I proceeded to cheat off the kid next to me in an effort to avoid
getting a failing grade that I’d have to bring home to my father. You don’t
just bring back that sort of news; it’s
the sort of news best felt, specifically in the rear. I was going to cheat, I
did cheat, and I got caught so laughingly easily I can remember the snickering
by the other children in the room when I was written up by my teacher.
There
was a particular sting in the air as a felt the note being drafted up. Perhaps,
if Malcolm Gladwell’s piece The Art in
Failure holds truth to the perception in success and failure in the world
today, then, yes, “human beings sometimes falter under pressure” so much to the
point we don’t just stumble. We fall.
A lot. This is because of what drives us. Instead of wanting to merely complete
a task, we seek out to do the 110% to feel a form of validation that’s practically
alien to explain. But, by Trent Wolbe’s How
I Hacked My Brain with Adderall a laughable tale about drug use to awaken
the brain to new possibilities, this desire to succeed, and do all we can to
succeed, is subjective, it’s all “one’s perspective” and that perspective
varies greatly from person to person. Holding a person accountable to the idea of
a form of success set in place by another is trying to copycat perfection,
which isn’t possible by any means.
Many
turn to the use of other things to achieve their success and while “medicine
and technology [can] expand the limits of our knowledge” this limit should be
broken through the self, rather than through alternative means; success comes
in many shapes and sizes, in different colours and forms, but a “poor
performance. . . reflects the complexion of the audience” meaning that before
we go about judging others on what they do we must first ask ourselves what we’re
capable of individually; we cannot go about asking for what we can’t do.
Relative Perfection
ReplyDeleteI'm trying to come up with a title that plays with your line about "awakening the brain to new possibilities." Something like "The Brain Awake" or "Wake Up, Brain!" The epigraph would be from the Japanese admiral Isoroku Yamamato who, after the bombing of Pearl Harbor said, "I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve."
ReplyDeleteThe reason why I picked this title is because is because this piece makes us see how obsessed we are with perfection. We always want to reach higher and aim for a goal that is not cleat or set. We all have this idea of "perfect' even though this word means different things to different people.
ReplyDelete