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December 09, 2007

Justifying My Existence

An excerpt from my novel, Diary of a Heretic:

For years I adhered to the idea that if I lived spartanly and maintained hope, a day would come when I would metaphorically if not actually be invited to speak my mind.  And someone would listen. Someone would understand.

The way I imagined it:  When you were called upon to speak, you were supposed to say why you think you’re alive, why you were born, and why you’re still around: What are your reasons? Everyone needs to come up with his or her own personal answer.

After all, no one gets through life without having to justify his or her existence. The biggest problem is that there is so much stuff we don’t know how to talk about. At least in my experience, whenever I ask someone: Does it ever hit you how weird, how really extreme it is being a person, this thing, yourself? Generally whoever I’m asking is like: “What are you talking about?”

Oh, occasionally someone quick, who was actually listening to me, will say:  “Well, maybe it is weird being you . . ”

A response that’s lighthearted and clever, but ducks the question.  As if it’s gauche to ask, let alone answer:  “Why am I alive? What’s the point?”

People hate to admit their ignorance. They would rather cling to theories that are, in fact, very hard to believe, but for them, I guess, easier than saying, “Duh? I don’t know,” their whole lives.

Personally, I think that special people, who work at it constantly, do get a clue. It’s just that they’re so rare and their hard-won intimation so cryptic everyone else thinks they’re crazy.

Perhaps the best you can do is: ignore the odds. Hope and pray that the impetus behind your actions glides along an invisible, parallel course exerting a distinct pull. Grasp it and you’ll have an answer.

(Click here to read the next episode.)

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Comments

I can't imagine anyone tninking you are weird, Kathleen. Unusual, yes, but weird, no.

Hey wise one, Thanks for the comment. While I don't think we can know what anyone thinks of us, I doubt people suspect me of weirdness like witchery.
More important, the narrator's voice belongs to a 26 year old man. If that's not obvious in the next excerpt, I'll need to rewrite this. Good you pointed it out.

With just this short bit, you could fill a novel, and then you would still have enough material to pull an 'James Bond'-er. One has no clue why (s)he is here, one can only take the best of the time (s)he has.

I think the passage does sound very much like a 26-year-old guy. Generally people stop asking these sorts of questions after around the age of 30.

PS, that was me right above.

Thanks, Manictastic and Dan. My husband agrees that most people stop asking such questions after age 30. Why I can't give it up is a mystery.

Ummm Kathleen I hate to be different. Maybe I'm the one that's weird but I ask those questions all the time. I'm over 30. Much over :-)
Love this one. Cheers.
~JD

Good to hear from you, J.D. It's great to be different. Especially since, everybody is--that's my theory.
As for the questions, I think they're important to ask, and keep asking, since no one can answer for certain.

Ok. This passage is first up but I love it...
"For years I adhered to the idea that if I lived spartanly and maintained hope, a day would come when I would metaphorically if not actually be invited to speak my mind. And someone would listen. Someone would understand."

Very poetic, my dear.

Ok. This passage is first up but I love it...
"For years I adhered to the idea that if I lived spartanly and maintained hope, a day would come when I would metaphorically if not actually be invited to speak my mind. And someone would listen. Someone would understand."

Very poetic, my dear.

Keep up with the heresy.

Thanks, Heretik. Mine's nothing compared to yours.

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