Let’s stop right here and think about something. Do you
remember any of those moments in life when you realized things that seemed
profound to us at the time – for example, the realization that you might write
a great work of literature? Alright, it didn’t have to be a great work, but you
knew that you had something important to say – that your insight would be
useful and should be shared with the world for the betterment of mankind. Maybe
your “moment” had nothing to do with writing. Perhaps you would be a wiz in the
lab and make some significant breakthrough in science or medicine. Maybe you
would paint a great picture, or inspire the world with your music. There are so
many things that we might have done in life. And I’m not talking about whether
or not you ever did these things. For all I know, you have. No, what I’m
referring to is that “moment of realization” – a point in life when we
discovered within ourselves the promise of something. The new beginning!
These moments generally come to us earlier in our lives when
our minds and bodies are fresh, our energy levels are high, and the future lies
before us. Actually, I’ve had many of these revelations – so many that there is
no way I could ever remember them all. They are like falling in love, having
great sex, or maybe just eating chocolate. Well, maybe eating chocolate is just
too mundane, but you get the idea. These are great experiences and the
stimulation that we gain from them gives us the drive to follow through. Sure
these “moments” do not all result with the realization of the dream, but the
joy of the moment and the pursuit leads us to one of life’s most enriching
experiences.
Now that you know what “moments” are under discussion, the
question that I have is – are there just a finite number of these “moments”
that can occur in our lifetime? Are these “moments” limited to our youth? Do such
“moments” continue throughout our lives with just the sense of the profound
being diminished? Will Godot ever get
here?
My feeling is that
these “moments” do continue throughout our lives. However, it is possible that
some of these “moments” are lost in the task of living. We lose our ability to
recognize them as we are desensitized by exhaustion from responsibility. We
lose the ability to see and feel some of life’s most beautiful moments. There
are innumerable times that I have read about the most creative people and their
imperfections. They are lousy at relationships. They cheat on their
responsibilities. They ignore the burdens that most of us carry. The ability to
create comes at a cost. I don’t really know if this is valid, but it sometimes
feels that way.
It seems like this kind of feeling should be a total downer,
but is it? To me it is hopeful. I
realize that, if I can just find a balance between the burdens and
responsibilities of life and the freedom to be inspired and create new “moments”,
I will have happiness. This hope is what
carries me forward and gives me a sense that there are contributions that still
might be made.
Today, we have all these new communications tools that are
the result of the explosion of ideas that are coming out of digital technology.
These tools provide us with new efficient ways of expressing ourselves that are
profound amplifications of earlier advances such as the typewriter, the
printing press, or even the pencil. Think about the traditional music that
comes out of the coves deep in the Appalachian Mountains. Music forms evolved
using instruments that were easy to carry, easy and cheap to build, and
accessible to all. Not everyone had a grand piano in their living room. Not
everyone had a living room. But, people gathered on a front porch or in a barn
after a hard day of work – in the
evening or on market day and created wonderful music.
Take a look at the evolution of literature – what came first
the writing or the printing press? What came first the chicken or the egg?
Folks have been transcribing ideas since the days of petroglyphs on cave walls.
The printing press sure helped with the proliferation of literacy. A pencil and
some paper is all that it took to begin to express ourselves in a way that
saved those thoughts and provided a path towards their dissemination to others.
It is hard to imagine that any of us doesn’t understand how difficult that it
would be to go back to these origins. Yet, these simple concepts were once
profound ideas and impossible for the world to get its collective mind around.
Modern technology now provides us with tools that take the
creation of ideas and the ability to share them to a level that is profoundly
easier and more effective than ever before. Of course, these tools will not
make me a better writer, musician, visionary, thinker, or creator of ideas. But
good tools give us a greater facility to learn, practice and develop crafts
that we did not have before. Tools such as our modern technology offer to us
today open new pathways for our “moments” to find us.
My argument is that genius comes from engagement. My ability
to be a visionary is handicapped more by an inability, or unwillingness, to be
engaged in the world of ideas than by a lack of intelligence. The development
of our aptitudes, or life crafts if you will, plays a far greater role in our
successes than just about anything. Thus, my conclusion is to do my best to
learn as many of the tools that I can to facilitate the experience of arriving
at new “moments” of discovery and meaning. Life can, and should, be defined by
the great “moments” that arise in life. May they never stop!
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