Friday Philosophy: A grand fiction

A lifetime ago…

I had dreams from time to time about writing fiction.  If I could only capture my dreams, which I was sure were filled with interesting substance of grand consequence, I was sure there would be stories people would want to read.  As I grew older, though, the only part of the dreams I could remember was the part where my dreamself was searching for a functioning toilet…meaning it was imperative that I wake up soon.

I never mastered the fiction thing.  When I start with a premise based in untruth, even the smallest change in the Herenow, my mind tends to follow too many paths arrived at because that untruth sparked too many consequences.  So mostly I read my books and thought about how those stories would have gone if I had been the author…a state which was surely never going to exist.

When I did start writing something besides mathematics, I stuck with my experiences, thoughts and feelings.  The only things approaching fiction were descriptions of the way I thought events should have…or could have…transpired.

Recently I am finding myself in a similar space.  As much as I would like to write prose about some of the concepts I mention in my poetry, trying to write about peace or fairness, justice or equality, on the one hand, or hunger, disease, bigotry, ignorance, neglect, or greed, on the other, seems to become just another effort in writing fiction.  That’s probably because there has been no peace in my lifetime.  There has been little in the way of fairness and what passes for justice seems to have minimal impact on people’s lives.  And equality has become so ephemeral as to be as much a fiction as I can imagine.

On the other hand hunger and disease, bigotry, ignorance and neglect have become accepted by too many people as just the way life is…and so writing about how we might bring an end to those conditions becomes little more than the exercising of a hyperactive imagination.

And greed?  What can I say?  People have reveled in its “glory” for the past 30 years.  Almost nobody listens to a voice that speaks against it.  Being against greed is considered quaint.

I remember what someone once said:

Some men see things as they are and ask ‘Why?’  I dream things that never were and ask, ‘Why not?’

–Robert F. Kennedy

Perhaps Bobby is also now considered to be quaint…old-fashioned.

Trying to solve the problems of the world has taken a back seat to electing personalities.  People think they have to find someone they can trust to elect…to do what?  Meanwhile it seems that actual doing becomes a fiction…something that we may do sometime, sometime well into the future, when the time is right, when the chances of success will be better.

Is that time also a fiction?  What do I have to go by that indicates that it is not?

And meanwhile the main focus of our politicians always seems to be to pursue being elected.  Big surprise?  Not to me.

Another quote:

Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.

–Margaret Mead

But it has always proved to be so difficult to assemble such a group, to have that group remain focused and committed to the task.

And now I find my energy dwindling.  And what I wish could be done in this world seems to become ever more fictional, perhaps even the product of delusion.


Campfire

The Only Thing

Sitting around a campfire

we could select a problem

and jointly figure out

how to solve it

if we wanted to

But we are too many

for such a gathering

and to form

such an intention

and we have changed

–Robyn Elaine Serven

–March 21, 2008

15 comments

Skip to comment form

    • Robyn on March 21, 2008 at 23:06
      Author

    …looking for a little magic:

  1. that you write so eloquently about than to sleepwalk through life.

    Often when I work a long stretch at work, and especially lately when it has been a difficult one I do feel like a bit of a zombie, a sleepwalker, a replaceable worker bee serving a disinterested queen.

    But I have always also been easy to entertain and self entertaining so I can snap out of it even if just for a moment and sometimes a moment of truly reflective thought is worth the other hours of being a hamster on a treadmill.  

    • Alma on March 22, 2008 at 00:11

    whether it makes a difference or not.  Because we never know how much worse it might have been had we not tried.

    • Robyn on March 22, 2008 at 00:38
      Author

    Verizon is not usually our friend at times like this.

    • Viet71 on March 22, 2008 at 00:54

    In which ways is the two-dimensional plane like a one-dimensional line and different from a three-or-greater-dimensional universe?

    Thanks for your comments on this and completely different, other matters.

    I wake up at 2:30 a.m. EST thinking about these things and have no satisfaction.

  2. I can’t tell it from here at 70-80 degrees and sunny every goddam day, but I think it has been an awful long winter up there! Folks seem to be fatigued and burnt out everywhere. Even the invective on Dkos seems half hearted right now, lol.

    This too shall pass

Comments have been disabled.