March 27th, 2009

100th Post

I write to you on the eve of Friday March 27th in the year 2009, this 100th post.  It’s hard to believe that it’s already been 100 posts, and that there are hundreds more I thought of but never bothered to capture here.  If you’ve read some of my previous posts, you know I’m not big on milestones or celebrations of numbers that are trivial (for the most part).  Or really planned joyous celebrations of any type (see Birthdays, Weddings, Holidays, etc.). But I’ll indulge in reflecting on milestones and goals for the sake of the 100 posts that came before this, and the 100 that I assure you will follow.

Maybe it’s me fighting my nature, the to-do list planner? Maybe it’s me fighting social norms, my counter-culture inner-rebel? (Never been in an Abercrombie store (actually, there was once, but it wasn’t a big deal, and I didn’t buy anything), don’t even get me started on clothing catalogs where the models aren’t wearing clothes). Maybe it’s because I feel the energy we spend celebrating arbitrary things at planned times could be better spent celebrating meaningful things at random times?  Maybe I just like harder math that accompanies unplanned celebrations?

Last summer I was sitting in my aunt and uncles house in London, gathered with my family from all over, to celebrate the wedding of my cousin.  My uncle Neil asked me now that I had moved to Hawaii and had a job I was happy with, what my goals were.  I told him I had none.  He laughed nervously and thought I was being my normal sarcastic ass of a self (who could blame him really?), but upon inquiring further he began to see how serious I was.  I had/have no goals in the way that he (and most likely you) think of goals.

Over the course of an hour, I told him I was planning on buying a house, but it was not a goal, just a way to save money in the long run.  Up until my move to Hawaii I had set large umbrella goals from time to time as something to look forward to and to work towards, but I decided that when I moved here, I would give that up.  Counter to what my uncle believed/believes, and to what our society at this point-in-time leads us to believe, I believe that such long term goals can be a very bad and ultimately harmful habit.  When I reflected upon the goals that I had held previously, and the goals that my closest friends held dear (some could even say their dreams), I noticed that in many instances they were no longer helpful for me/my friends.

You see sometimes, we spend so long chasing our dreams or our goals that we forget why we are doing so.  We are so focused on not losing site of our dream or goal that we forget why we had set our sites as such in the first place.  I once wrote a fortune (to be placed in a whale) that said “If we spend too long chasing our dreams, by the time we catch them they’ll be tired.” I still stand by that fortune.  So often I find the people in my life so caught up in living for the end-goal, living for the finish line, that they won’t have lived at all until they get there (and by then they may be too numb to live at all).  I see it in the choices they make for ‘better health’ so that they can ‘live longer’ as if the quantity of years is an adequate replacement for the quality of the years. I see it in the choices they make to suffer through some inadequate existence for X amount of years, to get to the position that they ultimately believe they want to be in, only to get there and realize it’s just more of the same suffering for more money and none of which was worth the years they’ll regret not being able to relive or get back.

I realize goals and dreams have their place, but those are obvious as believing we should have them is the norm.  At certain times in our lives, we use dreams and goals to motivate one another (or ourselves) to work towards something we want.  I also realize that not everyone is in a place at their life where they feel they have everything they want (especially not at twenty-five).  I also want to re-itterate that I am a planner, and being a planner, I have planned for the long-term (financially, mentally, physically).  I just haven’t done so to the point that it has impeded on the present at all, and they aren’t dreams/goals or in the name of supporting a dream/goal (I never dreamed of having an IRA when I was growing up, and my IRA isn’t the financial scaffolding of my future dream-life).  So I told my uncle that for now, my goal is to not have any goals.  I used goals/dreams to get me to different points in my life, but I reject the idea that goals are a necessity to keep us motivated from day to day and week to week. I’m open to the possibilities of goals or dreams being a good thing in my life, but for now, my goal is to not have any goals.

For those of you colored unconvinced, I’ve crunched the numbers and the logic is sound.  Plus remember, you are reading this, so I must be doing something right.

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4 Responses to “100th Post”

  1. Joe ArandaNo Gravatar Says:

    During the past year I’ve been studying John Steinbeck’s “The Pearl” and it has lead me to some of the same conclusions you address here. It is amazing how often we construct our lives off of the simple premise “When I can achieve this/have this, then everything will be better.” It often seems like this is the inevitable result of living in a consumption based society. But the tragedy occurs when energy, desire, and concept of self-worth are dependent on an illusive result rather than the process. While I don’t feel living a goal-based life is inherently dangerous, making one’s happiness contingent on a result in the future can suck the child-like, experience based, wonder out of life. Example: the devoutly religious who choose to suffer throughout their lives in order to gain access to an ambiguous paradise in the after-life, or the wealth craving executive pre-occupied with collecting the most adult toys. Nice work here Simon…

  2. AshleyNo Gravatar Says:

    “I once wrote a fortune (to be placed in a whale)”

    Oh, how I heart you.

  3. Sans Your PantsNo Gravatar Says:

    As of this morning, I have ordered ‘The Pearl’ to be read upon its arrival. I think you are right Joe, it is an inevitable result. I even cut out a paragraph about the forever-cat-and-mouse game of one-upping one’s neighbor with the bigger house and bigger hummer and bigger credit card bill. I also agree that the danger is not inherent, but I have encountered very few people who have a healthy approach to goals/dreams. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve met many people who believe they have a healthy approach, but I’ve also met many people who believe they are worth the oxygen they’re breathing, in both instances they were gravely mistaken. I appreciate your comments and the indirect Steinbeck recommendation, and my feed reader tells me I am soon to appreciate a new post on your blog.

    I wish I was kidding Ashley. Try as I might to be funny, the most humorous things that I say/write are those that are 100% true. If only I could stop trying…

  4. mahNo Gravatar Says:

    WOW, Congratulations on your “100th post”. I am proud, have been inspired by many and certainly had more than a few chuckles. Please keep it up!

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