Michael Michael

Remember to choose.

“Choose not to be harmed—and you won’t feel harmed. Don’t feel harmed—and you haven’t been. 

It can ruin your life only if it ruins your character. Otherwise it cannot harm you—inside or out.”

— Meditations 4:7-8

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Michael Michael

Complacency threatens

I’ve always hypothesized that within my lifetime, it is extremely likely that one or several severely catastrophic events caused by human activity will occur because there’s simply far too much simultaneously going on within such a small time frame; the advancement of technology, the increasingly complexity and intricacy of systems that become nested within other already convoluted systems, the incessant battle of conflicting geopolitical, national, community, and tribal interests—these all progress at an immeasurable rate that by far exceeds the rate of progress we make in terms of developing cultures that inculcate within us a sense of responsibility, a sound morality, and a commitment towards humanity as a whole to create a world we can all equally prosper in. 

We were on the brink of complete and utter destruction of the human race less than eighty years ago, yet where is our sense of desperation? Where is our sense of indignation? We act as if we’ve progressed, as if we’re beyond the ignorance of the “dark ages” of the 20th century, when in reality all that’s changed is that the risk factors for disaster have been multiplied tenfold. When our pride, our ignorance, our obstinate and selfish beliefs about the meaning of life, and the amount of vapidity and banal distractions in our lives only seem to proliferate more and more, day by day, I’m increasingly unsure what hope I should have for the future.

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Michael Michael

Deserving

The more we try to succeed, the more we fail. 

The more we try to fix it, the more it breaks.

The more we try to love, we are pushed ever further away. 

The more we try to be right, the more we are wrong. 

The more we try to find clarity, the more we delude ourselves. 

The more we try to find direction, the more we become lost. 

The more we try to find meaning, the more it eludes us. 

Pouring out our hearts and toiling our way through strife and struggle to no avail, it seems as if we never get what we deserve. It seems unjust, inequitable, and absurd. It seems as if the world is out to get us. It seems as if there’s no sense in trying hard when the result isn’t even guaranteed. It seems as if nothing makes sense, and we should just give up. 

“I again saw under the sun that the race is not to the swift and the battle is not to the warriors, and neither is bread to the wise nor wealth to the discerning, nor favor to the skillful; for time and chance overtake them all.”

— Ecclesiastes 9:11

I keep coming back to this excerpt from Ecclesiastes to constantly humble myself, to ground my thoughts within reality, and to periodically detach from my consciousness the oppressive constraint that is this precarious notion of deserving. 

The fundamental problem with this notion of what we deserve is that it operates under a certain preconception that we innately understand this infinitely complex world we live in, when the truth is that we have but a modicum of understanding. It is inevitable that many events in our lives unravel themselves in a way we didn’t expect them to, and the more we obstinately latch onto the belief that everything in this world should be reliable and predictable, the more frustrated and disconcerted we become amidst this chaos. 

The solution is merely to let go—to eschew what we think should happen, and why.

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Michael Michael

Look how far we’ve come

When I can finally say I figured out how to be happy and fulfilled in this life—this oppressive and absurd existence I’ve toiled against for all these grueling years, ravaging my heart and eviscerating the essence of my soul, driving me to the brink of insanity—people will still tell me that I’m “wasting time.” 

How is this supposed to make me feel? 

I’m just frankly astounded that despite the monumental amount of progress we’ve made as a civilization, many of us still feel obligated to use an ideological bludgeon to shame others for merely finding their way in life, for merely wanting to derive a modicum of joy from this existence. I have no issue with discussing the best way to live our lives—that is the purpose of this blog, after all—but when we impulsively inject it with contempt, presumptuousness, and ridicule, it becomes an irredeemable injustice. 

When we boast about all this money, all this productivity, all this success, progress, and stability we’ve accrued, there persists a disconsolate void within all our hearts—an inevitable consequence of our neglect of simply asking what all this is even for.

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Michael Michael

April Fools’ Day

This is a day where we partake in the act of poking fun at the instincts pertaining to our sensibilities, of pushing the boundaries of what we believe is real, of testing the limits of our conceptions of absurdity—how each of us would react when presented with something ostensibly outrageous yet remotely plausible.

The only problem is that we live in an era where “ostensibly outrageous yet remotely plausible” can be used to describe an ever-increasing number of events, many of which covertly bridge this gap between impossible and normal; mass-produced, widely available handheld devices with more processing power than the most powerful computers of yesteryear? AI that is capable of programming, complex problem-solving, perfectly mimicking human voice patterns, and composing music and creating art that is virtually indistinguishable from the world’s best artists? These likely would have been interpreted as April Fools’ jokes merely one decade ago. 

But perhaps the greatest absurdity of all that in the face of such momentous change, we refuse to change. Bound by our anachronistic industrial-age thinking, we so desperately want the world to stay a certain way. We were always taught to demand proof. To demand evidence. To demand a guarantee for our effort invested and know that there will be a reward merely because we followed the directions as per the manual. But there is neither proof nor evidence, neither a guarantee nor a manual; the only certainty we presently have is in the undeniable realization that our society is at the cusp of revolution.

For most of us on April 1st, we blithely choose to laugh when we are presented with shocking news and evidence that directly contradicts our beliefs. But for every other day that we’re presented with such news or evidence, we neither laugh about it nor come to terms with it; we shove it under the carpet and neglect it. 

Our future depends on our willingness to eschew these emotionally-charged beliefs that cloud our judgment—these conceptions of absurd or outrageous, of plausible or sensible—and by doing so, we can honestly and lucidly confront things for what they are.

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Michael Michael

Maddeningly difficult

“Mindfulness is healthy, it's professional, and it allows us to be our best self. 

It is also maddeningly difficult, particularly in a culture that prizes busyness over just about everything else. 

But mindful isn't the opposite of busy.

Mindfulness demands intention. Mindfulness is the practice of simply doing the work. Without commentary, without chatter, without fear. 

To simply do our work.”

— Seth Godin, The Practice

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Michael Michael

Reasons not to drive a car

It is far more expensive than taking public transportation, utilizing taxi services or ride-sharing apps, driving a motorcycle instead, riding a bike, or just walking. 

  • Unless your job demands that you transport materials or people on a frequent basis, it is shamefully energy inefficient (you’re moving a three-thousand pound plus object across miles to merely transport yourself, perhaps one or two other people, or maybe some groceries) and greatly contributes to a variety of environmental problems.

  • It gives you an excuse not to exercise. 

  • It requires a great deal of attention and can be a prime source of stress due to traffic or car maintenance issues; you could spend your life far more productively elsewhere. 

  • Perpetuates car-dependent societies and abhorrent city design with countless roads and parking lots that require endless maintenance, incur massive debt, and degrade the beauty of the places we live in.

  • It endangers the lives of other drivers on the road, animals, and pedestrians. 

  • It endangers your own life. 

All this so I can make my life maybe 10% more convenient? So I can shamelessly destroy the environment and the places that I live, partake in a profligate waste of energy and resources, and potentially kill other people in the process? No, and no thank you. I’ll continue to live my “inconvenient” life. 

Those who continue to drive cars are not necessarily at fault, as this problem to a large extent runs deeper than personal responsibility; after decades upon decades of indoctrination and manipulation by the automobile industry, it has been thoroughly ingrained into the structure of our society and woven into the fabric of our culture. But at the heart of this conversation is not one that specifically pertains to our car dependency; it is but my earnest hope that in whatever it is that we take for granted in our privileged lives—be it how we get around, how we make a living for ourselves, what we consume as forms of nourishment or entertainment—at the very least we can be honest about the consequences of our actions.

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Michael Michael

Some paradoxes of the human condition

When happiness cannot exist without suffering, joy cannot exist without pain, learning cannot exist without mistakes, success cannot exist without failure, excitement cannot exist without tedium, we balk and groan when we are forced to confront the latter.

When virtually everything in our lives requires a healthy balance in order to optimize our mental and physical well-being, our culture inculcates within us a desire to constantly strive for more or better, and never enough.  

When cultivation of the mind is the only pathway towards a life well lived, we are ensnared in a perpetual conflict with the self, where our rational thoughts are often overridden by our prewired instincts and obstinate emotions.

When most of us already understand the specific factors that contribute to a truly happy and fulfilling life, we constantly sabotage ourselves, often unknowingly. 

When our collective prosperity as a species demands that we cooperate and establish unity, we obstreperously antagonize, degrade, and dehumanize one another by waging brutal wars and manufacturing senseless conflicts. 

When we are hyper-aware of the present status quo and will do anything to defend it, what actually kills us in the end is what seeks to harm us not in the present, but in the distant future. They are the truly malevolent forces within this world that will creep upon us when we least expect it—those that insidiously lurk far beneath the surface, waiting for the opportune moment to strike.

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Michael Michael

Writer’s block

Whenever I think that I’ve run out of ideas, that I have finally completely exhausted what I have to say and thus have nothing to write, I like to juxtapose two ideas in my mind—the first being the countless times in the past three months that I’ve felt this way, and the second being the staggering amount of writing I’ve done in the same exact period of time. The more I realize just how much I’ve actually accomplished in this time frame, the more it belies this sense of writer’s block. These feelings persistently creep up on me, attempting to sabotage my work and my consistency, and yet, time and time again, all the evidence points to the inevitable fact that they are a mere illusion. 

Regardless of the degree of resistance that I feel—this subconscious balking, urging me to give up and go back to my idyllic, apathetic, and purportedly easy and carefree life—I realized that if I merely sit down and put my mind to it, I often spontaneously find myself in a state of flow. No matter how much I previously felt like I didn’t want to read, exercise, or write a blog post or reflection, once I dispense of the resistance and galvanize myself to just move forward, I end up always putting my heart into it. 

There is undoubtedly still this subconscious component of my mind that is trying to get me to capitulate, to pull me back towards what it believes is safety and stability, to accept defeat and realize that all my ideas are hackneyed and banal, that I have nothing to contribute to this world, to convince me that I haven’t actually changed all that much in these past three months. 

I won’t fall for its tricks. I’ve heard enough of my own excuses. 

I know who I am, and I know what I’m capable of.

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