I don't know if it's possible to define
what it means to really live. At least, not in the sense that
colloquial Americanism puts it. Obviously we have medical definitions
of what it means to be alive versus otherwise, though even that is
somewhat contentious since with modern medicine, we can revive people
even after they have been declared legally dead. Additionally, if the
presence of a heartbeat and breathing along with brain waves are the
hallmarks of being alive, what are we to make of that ever-present
issue of when life begins in the womb? Yet if we cannot even decide
on a medical definition of being alive, how are we to define that
feeling of freedom and purpose that each of us seek in our most
whimsical tempers?
The matter is further complicated by
the broadness of what causes people to feel alive. Some feel alive at
the top of a mountain or in the midst of some other breathtaking
swell of nature. Others feel this purpose and thrill in dark alleys
in desperate situations. Still others find life and purpose in
cathedrals or prayer closets, and some find that lavish spending and
ownership of expensive items brings them that rush that seems
bespoken of life. While there seems to be great variation in what it
means to be alive, like so many other slippery definitions, it
remains fairly easy to describe what it means to feel dead.
If you are reading this, I find it
unlikely that you have ever been dead in the medial sense of the
term, though I suppose I have met several self-proclaimed phoenixes
in my lifetime thus far, so it's not impossible. But despite this
lack of literal deadness, I find it unlikely that you have not
experienced an emotional state that resonates with the word “dead.”
Perhaps you were listless, tired, bored, stressed, unhappy, or
distinctly uncomfortable. Your emotional state was similar to that of
a skeleton in a pineboard box, and you felt that you couldn't get out
of it for whatever reason. You found yourself with a lack of purpose
and your dreams seemed impossibly far away. If you've felt that way
for more than 5 days in a row, you may have clinical depression like
me.
I bring this up because I have just
recently found myself relieved of the shackles of a constricting job,
and now that I have time to think, I realize just how dead I have
been feeling for the past 3 months. You know it's bad when you are
counting down the days until school starts just so you don't have to
deal with summer anymore. It's frustrating, of course, because all
the things I wanted to do, including writing in this blog, were just
shoved aside for the sake of something that I realize I don't even
know why I wanted it. No amount of paychecks are worth the many
sleepless nights and anxiety medications that I went through for the
sake of this job. Yet I needed a job.
Isn't this the crux of it though? My
dear free-spirited friend with the camera and the unique clothing
choices sends me instagram photos with captions like, “travel while
you're young and don't worry about the money,” or, “You were
meant for more than just paying the bills.” But most
problematically, I find that while my life thus far is not life
giving and full of purpose, I find my stressful workload and lack of
artistic outlet preferable to that summer I spent homeless. I guess
it was nice for a while to have all the time in the world to pursue
whatever I wanted (as long as it was free); I painted a lot, and I
spent a lot of time driving around just to look at things, but I was
also pretty hungry. I appreciate people like YouTuber Homeward Bound
who packs up her whole life and drives around in an SUV. It sounds
amazing. But the reason most people live in houses and work 9-5 jobs
is that we as humans require stability as well as freedom. But how
can we keep from being dead while living in a safe place?
A wise man once said that freedom isn't
safe; that we can't experience true freedom without giving up a lot
of safety, stability, and comfort. But truly, we can't have a great
deal of safety and comfort without abandoning a certain amount of
freedom. According to the idea cliodynmics, history repeats itself on
a generational basis because generation 1 becomes restless and wars
and catastrophes break out, and generation 2 grows up in this unrest
and insecurity and therefore takes extensive pains to avoid it in
their lifetimes. Unfortunately, the grandchildren or perhaps even the
children of generation 2 grow up in the relative safety and comfort
of this counter-movement and become restless as their ancestors a few
generations ago did, and the cycle repeats itself. That is to say, we
don't realize how awful war is unless we've lived in it, yet without
war to contrast against, we become bored and dream of something more
exciting than a peaceful life.
There are those who say that we are
currently on the cusp of World War III. This, in my opinion, while a
frightening possibility, is less likely than civil war based on the
many factions of social and political causes at work in the United
States today. I'm no political commentator. Those who know me
wouldn't hesitate to say that my political beliefs are rapidly
brushed aside in favor of individualism; if you want social change,
don't get involved in politics: be that change yourself. But in
whatever case, there is the possibility that dramatic civil unrest
will rock the country I live in at any time. Will we feel more alive
then? Will we find more purpose in vendettas and tactics and
affiliations than we do in economics? Could that fix the many cases
of purposeless young people that fill up our corporate world? Isn't
there anything else that would do this more kindly?
I can only pray that my little brother
wouldn't be drafted if it came to that.
So, what is freedom worth? What would I
do to rid myself of this feeling of deadness inside me that caused so
much lack of blog updating in the past 3 months? Relatively speaking,
this has been the worst summer of my adult life, and that compared to
a stretch of ridiculous jobs and lack of jobs and uncertainty about
my future. I have more than once compared my job this summer to hell.
But as a certain fictional military personnel once said on M*A*S*H*,
“War isn't hell. War is war, and Hell is Hell. And of the two, war
is a lot worse.”
I think we can all agree that the
definition of really living does not include war. Meditations Minis
says that we can find purpose and life in even the most mundane of
activities if we take a moment to love and dream. But while I agree
that we need dreams and we need to feel alive and full of purpose,
there's also something to be said for finding a place to dream that
isn't built on boredom, supposed victimization, or social positions.
(Why is there a picture of a colorful crochet blanket at the end of this post?
Obviously because I crochet when I'm anxious and this seemed like a pleasant photo to put up to trick strangers into reading my article that has nothing to do with crochet or hiatus. But it's pretty <3)
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