“One
of the disadvantages of school and learning, he thought dreamily, was that the
mind seemed to have the tendency to see and represent all things as though they
were flat and had only two dimensions. This, somehow, seemed to render all
matters of intellect shallow and worthless...”
― Hermann Hesse, Narcissus and Goldmund
― Hermann Hesse, Narcissus and Goldmund
Intellectual pursuit need not be dry and sleep
inducing. Just because rigor and logic
are applied to the matters of the world, to the matters of life, does not mean
that we cannot just simply experience things that bring joy and delight. We are capable of duality. When we see sunlight falling through the trees
in a park onto a grassy clearing, we can joyfully experience it as a green space
of solitude and warmth. We can purely
see a place to set out a blanket on the ground and to open a picnic basket.
We don’t have to see a question of why the trees were located
there and whether their roots give off chemicals to prevents other trees from
growing between them. We don’t have to
speculate of the genus and species of the grass and why it flourishes in this
copse of trees. We don’t have to think
about the carbon/oxygen transition ratio that the trees engage in and whether
they in a day take care of our carbon footprint. Some days are days for analysis and some days
are just for sitting down with cold fried chicken on an old blanket. Some days
are just for drinking a glass of wine.
In my life I have known people who analyze everything including
how you say hello to them. You remember
the old stand up bit don’t you where in call and response fashion the comedian
says, “Good morning, eh?”. He then
adopts another voice and says, “What do you mean by that?” Sometimes such
people just seem lost in an internal chess game that will not end until they die.
On the other hand, I have known people who smoked pot, drank
beer and slept around until their bodies gave out. These were good people, nice people but people
for whom the phrase, “The road goes on forever, and the party never ends,” was
a mantra. These lives were lived in just a shallow and meaningless manner as
that of those who over intellectualize.
Life requires balance sometimes one must do the hard-cold
math. Other times one must accept and
simply be without opinion or judgment. Book learning is fine and gives us the
tools to live in organized society, a group of people fighting for higher achievement
and freedom from the vagaries of nature’s randomness. But simply being in place
in the world is required too. The issue
will always remain how to balance both.
Extremes either way can create a shallow and hollow place of being.
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