Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Magical thinking for the win

I told you back in August that I had started trying to learn to read Tarot. Among other things this means that I start most days with a quick check of what I need to know about the day. As often as not, I get white noise, or combinations of cards that make no sense.

But I've also used the cards, from time to time, to answer Yes/No questions. Should I apply for this job? Will there be anybody useful at this job fair? Is this plan for seeing Marie a good one? And there the answers have looked kind of reliable. One of the questions that I have asked not infrequently is whether to apply for this or that job, and I get the answer No pretty reliably. Of course I think this answer is great, because I don't really want another job at this point (or at any rate not just any old job). And in my mind I have this fantasy that I should spend the time instead producing content: writing a book about the stuff that I do professionally, or writing philosophy, or some damned thing. Even just writing more of these blog posts. (I did an inventory yesterday of ideas I've had, that I haven't written up yet, and came up with more than twenty new posts each for this site and for the Patio. Let's see whether I get off my ass and write any of them.) 

Fantasies don't pay the bills. And even if that's not an immediate concern for me right at the moment, it feels a little presumptuous to say that I am "supposed" to be spending my time doing this or that. Besides, even if you accept the whole idea of consulting oracles, I've read that it's unreliable to read for yourself about any question where you really care about the answer, because your opinions are likely to cloud your judgement or skew the reading.

Funny thing, though — it turns out there's a website whose owner will read Ogham for you for free, as an oracle. How accurate are her predictions? The people who leave comments seem to be pleased with the results she gives them, though that may be nothing more than selection bias. In any event she's never heard of me before. And it's free, so it can't hurt to ask. Right?

Anyway, a couple days ago I submitted a question:

Dear Kimberly,

I've been trying to learn Tarot for a few months now, but I'm often still baffled by the images so I'd like to cross-check something with you. Just at the moment I'm out of work; but several times I have had the experience of seeing a job posting that might be a possibility, asking about it, and getting a very clear "NO" from the cards. OK, maybe they were all just bad places to work. But it's happened enough that I want to ask: Am I supposed to be doing Something Else with this time, instead of just looking for another job? If so, what?

Thanks very much!

Hosea

And her reply was as follows:

Hi Hosea,

Yes, my Ogham agree with your Tarot -- you need to be doing Something Else.

They provide Quert or Delight well-dignified to answer your question.

Then she went on to give me a bunch of advice about saving money; some of her suggestions are things I'm already doing, and others aren't terribly practical for me right now. But of course she's never heard of me before, so how should she know the details of my situation? I did try to ask her a follow-up question, ("So what exactly should I be doing instead?") and got no answer. Maybe I'll ask again next week.

In the meantime, though, she confirmed that I'm not "supposed" to be looking for work right now. Maybe the way I phrased the question prejudiced her answer, but I still think it's interesting that that's what she said.

       

Sunday, April 24, 2022

On lying, part 11

This is the body of an email I wrote to Marie some four years ago. Recently I ran across a note to myself to post it here. The note doesn't say whether I wanted to expand on it, and I no longer recall what I was thinking at the time. So let me just present it as-is. Some of this may cover familiar ground, but some of it may be new.

The context is that I had been discussing aspects of my (past) relationship with D, and Marie had fixated on my remarks that D was a remarkably gifted liar when she needed to be. This led her to make some assumptions (based on the only other gifted liars she had ever known in her life) which I was at some pains to dispel. Anyway, my discussion went something like this. 

――――――――――

As for my descriptions of D generally, please bear in mind that they are all oversimplifications. Any real person is necessarily more complex than the best description. And there are a lot of ways that she resembled Wife. (Also a lot in which she differed hugely.) For the moment, just as a placeholder, let me say that the resemblance I had in mind in my poem was connected to her inability to hear me during certain kinds of conversations. For my part I had not learned to speak very clearly yet, and this needs a lot more paragraphs before it will be anywhere near the truth. But maybe it can stand for now until we can come back to it.

On the subject of lying, I want to say several things. And even all these will probably oversimplify, but maybe they can point in the direction of a better understanding.

On the one hand, I am well aware that lies corrode the soul. I spent many hours, over the years, trying to make Wife see that. And I think “Women and Honor” is brilliant and deep. If I spend very little time right now on these topics — on Rich and Aristotle and the virtue-side of the question — it’s not because I am unaware of them, nor because I disagree with them, nor yet because I think they are unimportant. It is more that I think I can take them for granted when I talk to you, so I don’t need to reiterate them. In a sense I assume them as prerequisites for any further discussion. You don’t spend a lot of time on algebra when studying calculus, but without algebra you are lost; and I would not trust my further thoughts with anybody that I did not first trust to get this part.

That having been said, ... well, let me tell you a story.

Back in 2009, things were getting pretty bad between me and Wife. I didn’t move out for another four years, but I made the decision that things were unsalvageable. Wife, for her part, seemed to get ever more erratic and desperate. And one weekend, when we drove down to visit my parents, she packed her handgun into her travel bag. She had bought it back when I was spending the weeks working in [a town far away] and she was afraid to be alone in the apartment. Since then she would go target shooting once every 5-10 years, but otherwise never used it. 

God only knows why she brought it along on this trip. When I asked her later, she couldn’t tell me. So I concluded, rightly or wrongly, that her behavior had become sufficiently unpredictable that it was no longer safe to trust her with lethal force. I stole the handgun from her and hid it. Of course she knew who had taken it, and I never denied that part. And when she first asked where it was, I said I wouldn’t tell her. But Wife can be remarkably persistent; so after the umpteenth time she demanded to know its location, I gave her answers designed to get her to stop asking but also to prevent her from ever really finding the weapon. 

Does that make me a liar? I suppose it does. It also makes me alive. True, if you look at the story statistically the odds are probably against her ever actually killing me. But I don’t feel too bad about helping the statistics along. When the stakes are life and death, it’s nice to avoid needless risks. 

Was I a convincing liar? I had to be convincing, so I was. To this day she has never found the handgun. Could I be convincing again some time in the future if the stakes were lower? I don’t know. I hope never to have to put it to the test. 

Did my convincing-ness come from 10,000 hours of practice? No. Absolutely not.

Anyway, the fact remains that after all my speeches to Wife about how lying corrodes the soul, I lied to her to prevent her putting her hands on a lethal weapon to which she had — still has — valid legal title. And even though I totally believe everything I say above about the virtue of telling the truth — in other words, this has nothing to do with simple hypocrisy — I would do it again if I had to, if I thought that it would avert the murder of myself or someone I love. 

Therefore perhaps what we need is a new theory, a wider theory — one that does not contradict the virtue-talk I reference above, but which extends it somehow. Perhaps it includes the former theory as a special or limiting case, or something like that.

―――――

There is an easy way to evade the issue, but it’s one I reject. The easy answer says, “When you misled Wife about her gun, that wasn’t a lie so much as an exception. Consider even something like homicide. If a mugger threatens to kill you and you kill him first in provable self-defense, no court in the country will convict you. So this was self-defense and that makes it OK.”

Except it’s not. Yes, under certain circumstances you can do things that are normally forbidden and get away with them. But that’s just because we as a society have made certain conventional agreements about what behavior we will prosecute. It says nothing about the reality of the act itself. If lying corrodes the soul, then it corrodes the soul even if you have an excuse. Using the example of homicide that the objector in the previous paragraph bounced through so chirpily, killing another human being takes a toll on one. Even if you kill a mugger in self-defense — hell, even if you save the lives of a dozen innocents by taking out the villain who was holding them hostage — you will carry the burden of that death for the rest of your days. It may have been the best thing you could do under the bad circumstances, but that doesn’t make it free or easy. Or if you hate your enemies, the hatred will poison you just as surely, whether your enemies are immigrants or Klansmen, the Amish or the Gestapo. Each of these things — the lie, the killing, the hatred — costs. Each of them takes something from you. The fact that other people will congratulate you this time while blaming you that time is entirely irrelevant.

Where does that leave me, then? It’s a little late for me to aspire to a life of perfect sinlessness — that cherry has already been popped. And I’m not sure that it’s actually the best choice: what if you are confronted with one of the awful dilemmas we were just talking about that look like extenuations? But let me go back to this idea of cost. It’s always a bad idea to incur costs heedlessly, of any kind. And as the soul is more valuable than the wallet, it’s prudent to be even more cautious of costs to the soul than of costs to the wallet. But it costs something to buy groceries, yet we do it. It costs something to go to work every day, yet we do it. Is this cost really that different? Or is it, too, something we can choose to pay under certain circumstances, when it is worth it — doing wrong while knowing we are doing wrong and choosing it anyway for reasons we think sufficient?

We think sufficient.” There is an unavoidable element of subjective judgement here. We might be wrong. So it behooves us not to be flippant about it. But this subjective element also makes it harder to judge someone else. If I look at D, say, it costs me nothing to congratulate myself that I would never lie about this or that. But how can I really see the pressures on her without standing in her shoes? Since I can never stand in her shoes, is it not maybe the kinder path to back off?

This does not mean ignoring things that truly affect you. One reason I can admire D’s technical skill is that I arranged my involvement with her in such a way that it didn’t matter whether the things she said were true or not. Under different terms of engagement it would have mattered more and I would have cared more. But in her case I could afford not to care.

And this is why I think it is important to know someone’s story. It’s not my job to score anyone on a moral checklist. But if I am going to interact with someone I want to know what I can expect. So rather than know X is Good and Y is Bad, I’d like to know that X is reliable with money but don’t offer a drink to Y. If I can choose the Wrong sometimes, when all the options are bad ones, so can the other fellow. But in that case it is most valuable to know how he evaluates bad situations, not merely that he might do Wrong on occasion.

      

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Crime, revisited

The more that I read John Michael Greer, the more that I find myself in worlds of thought that are different from the ones I used to frequent. And so an idea occurred to me earlier this week — a silly one, trivial really, but I figured I'd record it here because why not?

For years I'd joked to myself that I'd married Wife deliberately, knowing it was going to be a painful slog, "as punishment for my sins." I'd say this, knowing that consciously I didn't believe in any metaphysics that could make sense of it, knowing that consciously it had to be a joke, and yet feeling that at the level of some subterranean emotion there was something to it. A few years ago I even tried to think my way through this paradox, in a pair of linked posts here and here. And maybe that explanation is the true one.

But Greer is a magician and an occultist. So he takes ideas like reincarnation and karma absolutely seriously, and talks about things like "the work you have to do in this life." And so it occurred to me, ... did I deliberately choose a life where I'd marry Wife, in order to burn off some karmic debt acquired earlier?

More generally, I thought about the affection I have always felt for narcissists and crazy people: people I've known personally, like Wife, Scarlett, D, and even Tartuffe back when I was a little kid; but also authors, like William Blake, or Julie Powell, or Robert Pirsig. (See also this movie review.) And all of a sudden I wondered, "Might it be that some of the work I have to do in this life has to do with dealing with crazy people? This could explain the inexplicable attraction" I feel towards them. In other words, if that were defined up front — before my birth — as a boundary condition, it wouldn't have to make sense to me in-universe (as indeed it doesn't) so long as it was a fact (which it is). 

I don't know what to think of the doctrine of reincarnation itself. In fact, I wrote out my thoughts on it earlier this evening and posted them here, on the Patio. But the idea did cross my mind.

        

Saturday, April 16, 2022

The stench of failure

I've noticed something since being out of work. As the office was shutting down and I was on my way out, a lot of people said they were sorry to see me go. "Make sure you keep in touch!" I collected email addresses from lots of them. So from time to time I've sent email to one or another -- most especially after I started a professional blog under my own name. "See this silly blog I started? What fun, eh?" And reliably, what I hear back are ...

Nothing.

Crickets.

And still nothing.

Who all have I contacted in this way? Let's see. There's been ...

  • the guy I described here as "my only real friend from work" (but I don't think I ever gave him a name for this blog)
  • Hil
  • Elly
  • Bill
  • Frank 
  • and I count at least five others, none of whom I've bothered to mention here.
From Bill and Frank and one of the other guys, I got a brief one-line reply. Also from my friend at the top of the list. When I asked my former manager if I could use him as a reference, he replied right away "Yes, of course." But when I followed up by thanking him and sending some general conversation, ... nothing. I've gotten a couple of short notes from a former employee, mostly when I am congratulating her on some accomplishment I've recently heard about. 

You know who I have heard back from? People who no longer work there. 

  • There's one guy who lives in the same town I do. We worked together quite a bit, and when I was first looking for a new job I saw one that might have worked for me but was a better fit for him: I told him about it, and he got it. We've exchanged a few emails, and we've gotten together for dinner twice. 
  • There's another guy who was never really friends with me, though we got along just fine. But he contacted me a month ago because he realized in his new position that the company needs someone who does exactly what I do. So ... am I available? (I've told him sure, let's talk.)
  • And a couple months ago I saw some news in LinkedIn about the former Regional President in my area, so I sent a note to Kathleen to ask for more details. At that point she was one of the very few people I used to know that I had not yet contacted. I got a long reply, which told me that (among other things) she was leaving the company and moving across the country to a place maybe two or three hours' drive from where I live right now. We've sent some more emails back and forth, and I think we are going to have coffee some time next month.
Why the discrepancy? What am I seeing?

At some level it's just that "work-friends" aren't real friends. You get along together because you have a common task and you basically like each other, but there's no real engagement with each other at a personal level. But I think there's a little more to it than that. If I were to have estimated how close I was to the "real friend from work" above, or to Hil or Elly, or to my former employee, I would have thought that I was closer to any of them than to, say, Kathleen. But she wrote back and they didn't. It's possible that I was simply wrong in what I thought about our respective friendships. But I think there's another factor too.

I think one factor is precisely that I'm unemployed.

And I think my very unemployment frightens people. How does it look to them? I send a chatty email, light-hearted and not very informative, maybe telling them about my blog. And then what? Isn't it possible that they are just a little bit afraid to answer? If I say something to Hosea, if I encourage the conversation, he's probably going to hit me up for job advice; or he'll try to use me as part of a networking chain. That's what all the job-hunting counselors out there tell you to do. Or maybe he'll start sobbing on my shoulder about all the bad luck he has had in interviews. And look how long it's been already. [I had been unemployed already for six months when I contacted some of these people, and nearly a year when I contacted others.] Why isn't he working yet? Is there something wrong with him? Is it ... contagious, somehow? Will his clammy desperation rub off on me if we get too close? And really, we weren't actually all that close anyway ... were we? I don't have to reply, ... do I? Of course Hosea's a nice guy and all, but how much do we really have to talk about? Of course I really should answer. I don't know. Maybe I will. Anyway, I'm busy right now. I'll think about it tomorrow.

Maybe I'm wrong. But I think there's something about the unemployed that is just a little bit scary to the still-employed. That's why I could connect with the guy in the same town, because he was laid off before I was. The fellow who wants to hire me was laid off on the same day I was. And Kathleen is quitting of her own volition, because she wanted to move to be close to her family and they wouldn't let her work remotely. So she's no longer invested in it.

I think that when people see an email from me show up in their Inboxes, they smell just a whiff of the stench of failure. And they'd rather not have to deal with it.

Kind of like in this wonderful cartoon that I posted -- gosh, it looks like ten years ago.

         

"Sick to my stomach" part 2

I talked with Debbie last night. We chatted about inconsequential stuff for a while, and then she asked, "Do you want to talk about that Russian blog?" Yeah, sure, let's do that.

She said she had read "the whole thing," which she cannot have meant literally because it covers six years. Maybe she meant the whole first page, or at any rate the first couple of posts. She said the general description of how people were reacting to the current economic sanctions sounded believable to her. But then she said the part that upset her so much was that the author was "repeating all the propaganda" issued by the Russian government. I suggested that how you react to something depends on what you know about it; so if the only information you have is what is published by the state news media, you are going to believe that the official propaganda is right. She agreed with that part, but then pointed me to some other news sources she had found on the Internet: one was an interview with a man named Mikhail Khodorkovsky, a former oligarch and political enemy of President Putin currently living in exile in London; and the other was a series of videos by a Russian YouTuber named Elina Bakunova, who goes by "Eli from Russia" and posts videos about Russian life and culture. Khodorkovsky said that Putin is crazy and has miscalculated, that he is an enemy of humanity, and that he won't be in power much longer. Eli was careful not to express any political opinions, but did mention that her income has been completely cut off because she can no longer receive payments from YouTube inside Russia. We talked a little bit longer and then wound down. She's not upset any more, which is the most important part from my point of view.

Of course I didn't argue with her. I had no desire to argue, and I was interested to watch the videos she showed me. But what do I think is the truth about what is really going on? There, honestly, I still have to say that I don't really know. I'm not physically on-site in Ukraine; I'm not seeing the events with my own eyes. Even if I were, I might be mistaken or mislead about what I was really seeing. And since, in reality, I sit thousands of miles away across a wide ocean -- there's no way I can really know. 

Are there atrocities? Probably. There are usually atrocities in wartime. Who's committing them? Probably both sides, at least if the recorded history of human warfare is anything to go by. Who's winning? We won't know that until we get peace, and see who comes out ahead in the settlement.

Is there anything I can say for sure? Only a little. There are stories that Putin is crazy or stupid. Of course these are the kinds of stories that we always tell about our adversaries, so there's nothing strange about that. But I find them implausible. The man has ruled Russia more or less continuously since 2000, more than twenty years. Stupid people and crazy people mostly don't see that kind of long-term success.* Naturally it's always possible for someone to wear out, or to be fed false information by flatterers. But on the whole I expect that someone who has survived in power this long has learned how to avoid flatterers, and has controlled his appetites enough to keep from going to seed. Therefore I think it is most likely that Putin is still sane and clear-headed.

That says nothing about whether the Russian troops are winning or losing, but it does suggest that they were not destined to lose, that the invasion was not an obvious strategic mistake.

But what about all the news we are hearing from the front? What about the videos? And what about the things Khodorkovsky tells us? He used to live there, after all. He was deeply engaged with the Russian ruling class. Surely he knows what he's talking about.

Yes, no doubt Khodorkovsky knows way more than most of us do, but he's hardly an unbiased source. He is avowedly an enemy of Putin. That doesn't mean his information is false (though it might be); but at the very least it means his information is likely to be one-sided and not the whole picture. As for the Western news media, the intercepted messages, the videos, and all the rest ... well that's an impressive amount of reporting, to be sure. And of course it might be true. But I remember back in the early 2000's, when there was an equally impressive amount of information out there to suggest that Saddam Hussein was harboring "weapons of mass destruction" which (we were told) he might use at any moment against Iraq's neighbors and enemies. But that conclusion turned out not to be true. Is it different this time? I have no way to know.**


____________

* And yes, there might be exceptions. Otto von Bismarck is alleged to have said once, "There is a special providence for drunkards, fools, and the United States of America."

** Perhaps I had better emphasize that when I say "I don't know," I mean exactly that. After the war is all over, if it turns out that everything we've been told was true all along, that will be fine with me. I have no dog in this fight.            

Tuesday, April 12, 2022

"Sick to my stomach"

Well it looks like I really put my foot in it this time.

This afternoon I was wasting time when I should have been doing something more productive instead, and I stumbled across a blog that I thought was interesting. It's called "Between Two Worlds" and you can find it here

The author is an American ... who was working as an expat in Russia a bunch of years ago (I think I saw a mention of something like 2005, or thereabouts) ... met and married a Russian woman ... moved back the the United States for eight years ... and then five years ago they all moved back to Russia. They had a couple of kids, he converted to Russian Orthodoxy, then later he actually took out Russian citizenship. He still keeps in touch with friends and family back home in the States via Facebook. In the last year, his wife died of breast cancer. And he has spent the years since they moved writing a blog about his experiences.

Of course the most recent posts have all been political, although he claims that he hates writing political posts, because the big news on everyone's mind has been the war in Ukraine. So for example he talks about what life is like under the American economic sanctions. (Short version: not that different, really; and to the extent that there has been any impact at all, it has been to make the Russian people support their government more and not less.) He talks about the news they've been getting there, which is (no surprise) very different from the news we get here. He talks about the general perception that the man-in-the-street there has of President Putin. (Again, it's no surprise that most people do not see him as the Mad Bomber.) And so on.

I thought it was interesting. I don't necessarily assume that everything he says is literally true. I figure his description of the popular mood is probably pretty accurate, because that's what I would have expected anyway. As for his account of what's going on at the front -- he's not at the front and neither am I. I surely believe that the Russian news is reporting what he says that it's reporting. Whether those reports are true is another matter. It's entirely possible that they are lies. But then, strictly speaking I have to remind myself that I'm not at the front either, so I can't confirm anything with my own eyes. If I am to be fair about it, I don't have enough data to rule out the suggestion that at least some of the news reports we get might also be lies. Do I? Can I be rigorously sure of that? Or is it not still true that truth is the first casualty in any war? Because in that case, the best I can do is to shrug and say I have no idea what's really going on, and probably nobody else does either.

But that's exactly why I found the blog so interesting. If nobody knows what's going on, then either I should listen to nobody or I should bend a tolerant ear towards everybody. So sure, I'd like to know what he says.

I emailed the link to Son 1 and Son 2, telling them I thought it looked interesting. So far I've heard nothing back, which doesn't surprise me. It's not infrequent that I send them stuff I think looks interesting, but it's very rare that they reply.

I emailed the link to Marie, Again, I've heard nothing back yet. (But really, it's been only a few hours.) I don't know what to expect from her.

And I emailed the link to Debbie. There was a little more thought behind this note than behind the others. You remember the description I gave above for the blogger? Well, by comparison, Debbie is an American ... who worked as an expat in the Soviet Union back in the 1970's ... met and married a Russian man ... and moved back to the United States. There her story and the blogger's story diverge. She and her Russian husband ended up divorcing because of ... reasons, and her life took a different path. But I really did think that if she took the time to look at this guy's life, she might find something interesting there. I sent her an email about it at 5:55pm, in which I suggested why I thought she might find it interesting some day when she had the time to read it.

At 6:21 pm -- that's 26 minutes after I clicked "Send" -- she sent me a reply. Her entire email in response read as follows:

Hi Hosea,  I read through the blog and I have to say it makes me sick to my stomach.  i don't know what else to say.

Debbie

Oops. Guess that was a swing-and-a-miss, huh?

I don't know what parts of it made her sick to her stomach, because she didn't say. It seems like she wouldn't have had a whole lot of time to read six year's worth of posts in 26 minutes -- less, actually, because you have to take out time for her to read my email and to write hers. Maybe she just looked at the first post or two? Even in those, the guy never supports overt evil, never says that it's good to club baby harp seals (which -- just to be clear -- I strenuously oppose!). In the parts I read, all he says is that most of his neighbors support Putin, because most of his neighbors believe that Putin hasn't really done the things he's accused of in the West. Maybe she read something I didn't see? Or maybe it's something else. I don't know.

I sent her back a very quick note in reply:

Oh my gosh. I'm so sorry.

Hosea

I don't know whether to expect another email from her later. We'll talk over Zoom this Friday, so maybe we can discuss it then. But clearly I screwed up. Or mis-estimated. Somehow. 

Oops.  

             

Thursday, April 7, 2022

Homerus vindicatus

OK, this one is for the sheer silliness of it, nothing more. But it was an idea that came to me about a week ago, when I emailed it to Marie. Her reply was more or less, Gosh, Hosea, that's nice. And then she never mentioned it again. Oh well. But maybe you'll find it entertaining. What follows is pretty much exactly what I wrote to her.

I just read -- "just" means I finished it maybe 5-10 minutes before starting to write this note -- an essay by Joan Didion about why she doesn't like short stories but wrote three of them anyway. ("Telling Stories," 1978.) The essay meanders, the way Didion's writing not infrequently does, but the gist of her complaint about short stories is that they are short. (Shocker, that. Who would ever have guessed?) She writes -- and you'll have to take on faith that the context makes sense here, because otherwise I'd have to type a page and a half to give it all -- as follows:

I was not going to Honolulu because I wanted to see life reduced to a short story. I was going to Honolulu because I wanted to see life expanded to a novel, and I still do. I wanted not a window on the world but the world itself. I wanted everything in the picture.

OK, fine. And certainly it has been a commonplace among Western writers over the last two-to-three hundred years that the novel is quintessentially the medium for capturing "life," for capturing "the world itself." Right? Isn't that what we tell each other? Isn't that, after all, the whole point of the novel? And really, what else could vie with the novel for that role?

Just because I'm feeling contrarian, I'd like to suggest at least one other form that can do the same thing at least as well: the Homeric epic. Like the novel, it can be as vast and sprawling as "the world itself." Like the novel, there is room for multiple subplots: this is another way that both of them are adapted to containing the world. But let's look at a couple of the ways that the epic is different from the novel.

The Homeric epic relies on blocks of description that are repeated at regular intervals -- not just once or twice, but over and over: "And he fell thunderously, and his armor clattered upon him." In a novel, that kind of repetition might be allowed once, if you want to make a very special kind of point. To do it five or ten times is considered bad writing. But isn't that how we live, in real life? Don't we actually circle around in little repetitive loops, where we repeat the same actions over and over? It's easiest to think about the habits of the day or the week: get up, eat breakfast, go to work, come home, feed the cats, eat dinner, go to bed. But even people whose lives are dramatically less predictable than that -- because they are homeless, or refugees, or just pathologically restless -- will have smaller rituals that they repeat routinely: rituals related to coffee, or to the bathroom, or to sex, or to something. Repetition is fundamentally how we learn to do anything, and it's how we structure all our actions in the world. In this respect, Homer is truer to life than any novelist.

The Homeric epic relies on epithets that describe characters in a small handful of fixed ways: "godly Achilles," "crafty Odysseus," "laughing Aphrodite." Novels, again, try to avoid such stale repetition, and have the freedom to describe people in a variety of subtle ways, showing them from all sides so that we (as readers) can get a full, three-dimensional understanding of them. But how often do we do that in real life, when we're not enmeshed in reading a novel? How many real people, in the course of our lives, do we ever understand with even half the complexity with which we understand the characters in a good novel? Two? Three? Maybe four, if we live long enough? Go ahead and tell me I'm wrong. But if you want to capture the way that we really think about the people that we really meet in the world, ... can anyone really argue that Henry James does a better job of capturing our thoughts about Other People than Homer does? Isn't Henry James (or fill in your favorite author) actually too subtle when it comes to the casual ways we really think about most people? Always excepting those special two or three or four, of course ... but I mean all the others.*

And then there are the similes -- my God, the Homeric similes! "Like when a lion is hunting a gazelle, and smells him far off in the forest, ..." and then Homer goes on for a whole blasted page about this lion hunting this gazelle, spinning the story out to almost interminable length before finally making his point and coming back the the matter at hand. Meandering, disconnected from the here-and-now, totally irrelevant. Right? But how do our inner thoughts work, really? Are we always focused on what's in front of us? Are we always thinking about the here-and-now? Hardly! Our inner thoughts meander as aimlessly as any Homeric simile. The thing in front of us can remind us of something that we saw fifty years ago, just because it has a special color or an odd smell. If you try to track the aimlessness of inner thought in a novel, you get a very edgy, experimental novel, the kind that people often wrote (but rarely read) between the World Wars. But with Homer that same aimlessness is normal.

I haven't talked a lot about external description here. If you want to describe in an external kind of way how something Really Was, novelistic prose might have the edge. All I claim is that Homeric epic is at least as good as the novel in capturing our inner experience of the world. But the whole traditional argument in favor of the novel has always been that it is so flexible in capturing inner experience. This should be the novel's home turf. If the Homeric epic beats it on this ground, do we even need to talk about any other?

Or perhaps I'm just being contrarian. Anyway, I hope you were amused.

__________

* Note added a few days later, on April 16. Long-time readers might guess that I came to this opinion by growing up with my father, who frequently reduced people to Homeric caricatures so that he would (in his mind) know what to expect from them. He put them in little boxes in his mind so that he could be sure to "say the right thing" ... and thereby somehow keep them placated. I talk about that habit here. The flip side of this same behavior is that he created caricature personae for himself too, as I discuss here. I don't know if it invalidates my argument to realize where it comes from. Since I didn't really mean the argument all that seriously, maybe not.        

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Hair, part 4

I think I just saw a connection between two themes I've written about at different times.

One of them is hair. You know I have written that I don't like the shaving of body hair, for either men or women. It's not that I insist the hair has to be heavy -- for some people, it just isn't. It's shaving it off that bothers me. I've discussed this here, here, here, here, and here, for starters.

The other is monasticism, which I discuss in my posts "Contra monachismum," "Pro monachismo," and "De monachismo." (I list these three by title, because I'm likely to search on one of those titles when looking for related posts in the future and I want to find this one too.)

And the linkage? That comes from a couple of discussions between John Michael Greer and the commentariat who contribute to his blogs: briefly here, and at greater length here. The gist of these discussions is summarized in one remark as follows: "Religions that grow the hair and cover the head don't tend to favor celibacy and are comfortable with emotional and intuitive experiences, while religions that shave the top of the head tend to expect serious practitioners to be celibate and to focus on clarity and self-control."

Really? Who are these traditions?

Some of the traditions that shave or tonsure the head include:

Do you see a pattern in that list?

By contrast, some groups that grow the hair include:

These groups don't have a lot in common. But one thing they do have in common is that none of them are monks, and all of them somehow accept the world rather than rejecting it. Even the sadhus, who -- yes -- are indeed renunciates, reach that point only at the fourth stage of life, after having led a full life as a student, and then a householder, and then a retired elder. They are not fleeing from life in the world, so much as consummating it.

And ultimately this is where I find myself too. In my "De monachismo" post I quote George Orwell on the irreconcilable difference between those who choose this world and those who choose the next. And one way or another, I choose this one. I see a lot that's beautiful in certain kinds of Christian life, and in certain kinds of Buddhist life -- just as I see a lot that's attractive in the secluded life of scholarship. But I still choose this world over the next. Who knew that this choice was connected to my opinions on shaving?

     

Isn't this called "chivalry"?

As usual, I'm kind of late to the party, especially when it's an event in popular culture. But a week ago the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented the Oscar awards for movies released in 2021. During the ceremony, Chris Rock was giving a presentation, and made a joke about Will Smith's wife Jada Pinkett Smith. Will Smith got up out of his seat and slapped Rock, adding, "Keep my wife's name out your fucking mouth." And so of course the Internet has exploded with commentary: lots of people are criticizing Smith for his "violence," saying they were "sickened" by the event, or that it made them "physically ill." And there are some who have come out in support of Smith: a few of them have supported him directly, but far more have offered a kind of oblique support whereby they charge that Smith's critics are hypocrites, saying (in effect), These folks complain about Smith slapping Rock, but they never said a word about some other incident that I think is way more important; so I'm going to call out their hypocrisy instead of commenting directly on the slap itself.

One actress who straight-up supported Smith was Tiffany Haddish, who remarked, "As a woman, who has been unprotected, for someone to say, 'Keep my wife's name out your mouth, leave my wife alone,' that's what your husband is supposed to do, right? Protect you." I'm not sure I'd ever heard of Haddish before this (I know, I don't get out much), but that one comment is the only one I've read so far that actually sounds right to me. Haddish seems to be one of the very few (at least among the Hollywood commentariat) that get it. And I'm pretty sure that 150 years ago, people would have understood that the word to describe Smith's reaction should be not violence, still less sickening, ... but chivalry, damn it! 

Of course we live in an unchivalric age. Chivalry often seems laughable. Certainly it's completely out of touch with the way we behave today, and with the behavior we expect from others. By modern standards, chivalry looks crazy or even criminal.


And it's only fair for me to admit that my own attempts to behave chivalrously have never worked out terribly well for me. (See, for example, here, here, and here. See also, for example, Nietzsche's commentary on the same topic, that I quote here.)

It's also interesting for me to notice that opinion across the country seems divided by region and by demographic cohort. One account on Twitter, for example, posted this map:

https://twitter.com/betonline_ag/status/1508926813623488524/photo/1?

And an article in the New York Post showed these poll results:

So I see that my opinion isn't really so unusual. It's one I share with people who earn less than $50,000 per year, people without a college degree, people who believe the Bible is the literal Word of God, people who support the use of spanking to discipline children; and also with people who live in Kansas, Oklahoma, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, South Carolina, and ... umm ... New Hampshire. I wonder if those are the demographic groups I align with on other topics? Maybe not quite 100%, so it's interesting that we align on this one.

One additional complication that I've seen people discuss is that the Smiths have a fairly relaxed view of marital obligations, and do not ask each other for sexual fidelity. Some people, in particular, have questioned whether Jada Smith deserves her husband's protection and support if she's also fucking other guys. I think this is a red herring. In the first place, if the two of them have agreed on this -- and that's certainly how it looks to me, from what I've read -- then it's simply irrelevant. But even if there were any tension between the two of them on that point, it would take nothing away from the honor of Smith standing up for his wife. If a woman embarrasses you in public and you can still leap to her defense, ... there is something noble and beautiful about that. Or at least that's what I tell myself.

Maybe I should find something else to think about.