The
changes that I’ve made between drafts 1 and 2 ultimately have not been much. I
did not receive much if any feedback on where my essay was going other than it
was alright in the sense that it was purely just a work I was elaborating upon,
an idea that with more additional information, I expanded a few ideas in a
seemingly coherent paper. I will search for more opportunities to revise my
essay, but I don’t believe there was much to change right now. The reverse
outline I made did show some discerning key terms between paragraphs, but the
central idea is still highly prevalent through the entirety of my paper.
An Open
Collection of Thoughts
There
is confusion in choice. The difference between one story and another is the
explicit ending; the tell of a tale is how articulately the story is formed,
how masterfully its conclusion is spun, like a silk web, waiting to be found. Time
and again, what is assumed to occur, is different from what occurs; the
disappointment ensued from such a bittersweet realization is often hard to
fathom, to stomach, like the journey to somewhere new.
The man
that climbs down these steps into the oblivion that is the burrowed subway has
a goal in mind. He descends, quickly, seemingly fluid in motion, as he
navigates between the estranged persons tumbling around him, from the grotesque
stares and disturbing lurches at him, his character. Why bother to be consumed
by the faces around you? There is no value, no point, in memorizing an entity
that doesn’t smile. So, in this stream of consciousness, the man boards the
open doors bestowed upon him, jostled to the middle of the car by fellows more entitled
than he, and soon enters the semblance of normality. Normality. Customariness.
Familiarity. And his destination? As soon as he stumbles from the crevices of
deep thought, he’ll have missed his stop; time to retrace his steps.
Malcolm
Gladwell in the essay The Art of Failure
elaborates this conventional disappointment, the denotation of an established
win that’s arbitrarily highlighted by loss. To shed some light on this, take
into consideration the absence of thought. Whereas a step-by-step guide
detailing the twists and turns to get from point A to point B may prove useful
in some sense of the word, “human beings... falter under pressure” so much to
the point that when equipped with the tools to withstand any and all form of
failure, submit to said failure, unexpectedly (Gladwell). Take the magnifying
glass closer. What is failure if it is personified by the varying perspectives
around a person? What is it if it differs from person to person?
For this
reason, it can be viewed as an attempt, and righteously so. To fumble, to mess
up, are all synonyms of failure, sugar coated for the more sensitive to
hearing. Despite the faltering escape from such a mundane event, one must come
into the thinking that this is a reality that encompasses all people. I screw
up, I miss deadlines, I slip upstairs, and I fall, fanatically imagining it was
a fabulous fail, but most definitely an embarrassment to all involved. My
mindset? I aim for perfection, I lay in wake for the next opportunity to do
better than the last time, better than my better, but perfection, like failure,
is relative to every entity involved, “the distinction between these two states
is critical”, like choking and panicking, and it creates an almost irrefutable,
ironic disparity, that while the two could be polar opposites, the degree of
difference is almost laughable (Gladwell).
This
idealistic perfection is unreachable and creates a large topic of concern, for
when our choices are consumed for an impossible end goal, that goal slowly but
surely becomes invisible. We can take this form of unattainable perfection and
pine it under a warmer light. In Jonathon Franzen’s essay Liking is for Cowards. Go for What Hurts there is a clear focus on
what such a fanatical perfection will give the user; any attempt to subjugate
another person to a watered down form of empathy, commonly referred to as love,
is a distorted idea, when in fact the watered down substance you then produce
is the self-induced “like” embodied within “a person defined by a desperation
to be liked”, lacking “integrity…, a center” (Franzen). This perfection is
“less of a victory” when compared to true, daunting effort (Gladwell). If our
unreliable success is from the impeding need to be perfect, then our failure
should therefore be a catalyst of acceptance for our imperfection.
The film The Five Obstructions, directed by Lars
von Trier and Jørgen Leth, pillars this belief, as time and time again a single
piece of work is ripped and torn at to be turned into something different but
almost equally fervent. What is an idea if not a string of thoughts that are
seemingly coherent? And if a thought mutated in a way, turned blue to the air
of change, what would one make of the idea? Is it different, its inner workings
holding the skeleton of something strange, or is it the same, because
essentially the colours were never a cause of concern for the thinker? The work recreated is The
Perfect Man but its essence stays the same; the idea is that no matter how
bountifully profitable something can be, its essence can remain in whatever is
derived from it, no matter if that work is redone with different people, different
places, or different equipment. An idea is mine whether it is colourized, cut
and paste, laughed at, or ignored; it bares my name, my fruition, and any and
all apparently evident creativity nestled within the burrows of my mind.
And this
creativity is a pawn. In the essay Joyas
Voladoras by Brian Doyle, this creativity is marked by an excursion from
the beauty of the hummingbird, its magnificent abilities and star potential, to
the realization of something much more sublime, something so grotesquely and
beautifully human. Despite age giving our minds time to grieve on the truth
inkling within our cores the knowledge that “all hearts [even ours]… are
bruised and scarred”, afraid to feel for fear of lack acknowledgement (Doyle).
This is the gateway to self-destruction because from the fear to bear our
weakest selves, our hearts, comes in the form resentment, no better shown than
on our faces, for if I have to lie to another how collected I am for them to
better accept who I am then it shows “[I’ve] been despaired of being loved for
who [I] truly [am]”, a person capable of so much more than being a face on a
screen (Franzen). For who am I but just another person full capable of the same
failures as the person to the side of me, another face on the screen, each
perfectly imperfect in all the same, odd ways.
When we
compare ourselves, each despairingly different, we collect the similarities we
find amusing, the features we wish to highlight upon in a new entity, this we
call perfection. In walks an entity possessing fewer blemishes than what
another has; jealousy is produced. From the get-go, we are creatures of habits,
stalking our prey, watching their ways, pouncing when opportunity arises, often
breaking the bounds we create to protect ourselves in order to get to something
greater. I feel this commonplace in my mind often. The times settle in of the
occasions in which I found myself dreading the frown that would sit in my face
as I peered at what new picture the mirror would show next. I would jab my
fingers into my cheeks and push upwards, tricking my mind into the few
milliseconds of delight that would make a clown weep. I can physically feel
jealousy, compare me to the creatures in heeled feet the stalk the streets like
the falcons of the sky. I can emotionally feel jealousy, stray away from the
petite, the beautiful, but compare me to living gazelles, their beautiful two
toned coats, far more richer, in perspective, than me.
If
jealousy is the product from the obvious and outrageous failure to achieve
unreachable perfection, then there should not be much a surprise when it
arises; jealousy is a poignant being that lives on the irrefutable belief that
a person can attain anything they wish to attain when that isn’t possible. So
much time is wasted for the heart to simply to be hit and start crumbling down
“in an instant” when in the time it spent saving “its heartbeats” for the
perfect opportunity to open itself, it could have realized it was no better off
than any other part made entirely of flesh, pumping within (Doyle). There is far
too much disparity in the augmented perfection in the sky and its success and
the lesser inadequacy along the stones we walk along and its disappoint failure.
We
shouldn’t hold our hands up for the ball that won’t come. If there is truth to Gladwell’s
words, then the beauty we wholeheartedly look for within ourselves comes from
the mistakes that we make, the unapparent journey to the finish line waiting
for us to cross; but if I’m seeing correctly, then Franzen is also right, the
route in which we embark in order to find something we like about ourselves, that
I love about myself, is one that is more than profitable, that although there
is no perfect answer, there is an acceptable one. There are a motley of
different crossings and findings we can make, but the track is circular, its
finite, and it’ll be crossed one way or another, with your knowledge or
without. Take in stride the beauty found within the journeys― all the new
things you’ll see.
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