The fact is, up till now I've been living my life like a video game (for lack of a better analogy). I've had all these benchmarks that are like leveling up. Start primary; level up. Go to high school: level up. College; level up. Just like a video game, the goals have been clearly explained and set in front of me. But graduating from college was pretty much the last level I could beat on my own. Like I said, the next level has always been family...but I kind of need a partner for that one. Which means that, for the first time in my life, while I do have a next level in mind, it has become a much more misty, on the horizon sort of thing rather than a planned, scheduled surety. And maybe the next level I have in mind isn't even the right one! Basically, my life has gone from Tetris™ to Myst™. Lots of wandering around and exploring with only minimal actual game progress.
well, technically this is Riven. It had prettier worlds. |
But that means that, for the time being, the sub-quest of Job is taken care of. I have a job, achievement unlocked, plus 250 coins (per month)! So what else should I do?
Well, the depressing truth is that life doesn't actually have clearly delineated quests, achievements, or levels anymore. I don't have any more socially dictated benchmarks that can reassure me that my life is progressing. All I have is an indeterminate length of time that ought to be filled before I die. My job is to fill that time in the most worthwhile way that I can.
Quick story. Way back in 2010 when I worked at Target, in a desperate attempt to find some way to keep my mind occupied, one day I started asking every person who came through my line which was their favorite fairytale between Sleeping Beauty, Beauty and the Beast, and Cinderella, and why. Sadly, I no longer have the exact results (though I remember them generally). But I did come up with some really interesting anecdotal data. At the time I came up with this great idea for a research project built on that data and I was legitimately excited about it (almost as excited as I still am about my epic Batman/V for Vendetta/Sense and Sensibility analysis). However, all that actually got done was the research about one single fairytale that ended up as this blog post. And there it ended.
it is absurd trying to find non-Disney images of these stories... |
But mostly, it just seemed like a better way for me to spend my evenings than they way I have been--either drifting aimlessly in the directionless eddies of facebook and buzzfeed, or turning my brain entirely off on TV binges. Surely there must be more value in learning than there is in comatose internet browsing....right?
I guess?
That is...yes. I cannot accept that nearly vegetative clicking is on par with learning; even if that learning is pretty much without use or even reason. Because that is what my research is. I don't remember what that project was supposed to be, so as of now I'm just learning about early fairytales for no other reason than that I find them interesting. And that's the problem. My Mormon conditioning tells me that information and education are worthwhile for their own sake. But another part of me keeps whispering that simply taking in information is...kind of a waste. After all, what really is the difference between three hours of facebook status updates and buzzfeed articles vs three hours of JSTOR and wikipedia articles about 18th century marriage traditions and the literary tradition of the animal bridegroom? Cause the facebook time is giving me information too. I'm learning who is pregnant, who is engaged, who is hungry, and who is addicted to instagram. So why do I feel less like I've "wasted" my evening after the JSTOR articles than the facebook? Is that feeling justified? Why?
baha! this came up when I googled "what's the point?" |
I would legitimately like to know what you all think...