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Greatness
By Laurent Grenier
[When I was a
nineteen-year-old high school student and budding poet – two years after my
diving accident] many factors adversely affected my creativity. My trips in a
special bus to school and back home, my courses, and my assignments, though I
was spared a lot of writing and was mostly tested orally, all this was
time-consuming. More often than not, my obligation to study took priority over
my desire to compose poetry.
To tell the truth, I had plenty of free time. That I spent much of it
uncreatively showed evidence of frivolousness, laziness, and cowardliness. I
usually preferred to take my mind off things, or to daydream, rather than to
express myself through poems. The satisfaction I could derive from achieving
this expression seldom induced me to try. The deterring elements were the
difficulty of trying and the uncertainty surrounding the outcome of my
efforts.
A poem – assuming one is concerned about writing beautifully – is indeed no
cinch. It requires a poet who is talented, skilled, and determined. My poetic
ability was fickle; my grammar and style were faulty; my will was faint. I
lacked the courage of my creative desire. This lack was not absolute. Now and
then, when I felt compellingly inspired, I resisted my temptation to trifle –
which amounted to taking the easy way out – and endeavored to compose a poem.
I had to repeat this endeavor, over and over, to grow more capable and
confident, less discouraged by the challenge at hand.
I am afraid young individuals similar to the young man I was then are not a
rarity. The prospect of success turns them on; effort and the risk of failure
turn them off. The contradiction is apparent, and the result predictable:
Since effort and the risk of failure are essential for success, the avoidance
of them precludes this success. Of course everyone knows this. The trouble is
that many refuse largely to accept it. This is proof that knowledge is
powerless in itself; it needs a strong will to be effective. Young
individuals, who know the rules of success, can be failures inasmuch as they
fail to accept these rules. Wisdom includes this acceptance (the exclusion of
which is thus foolish). It must be distinguished from knowledge. Wise people
are also brave people who put their knowledge into practice and become
successful for that reason. The obvious holds good in every way: Life without
courage is like a bird without wings; it cannot take off.
Why is it hard to want both the end and the means? Precisely because the means
are hard, not to mention the fact that they are hazardous, you might answer.
If you are right, then why do some actually thrive on this hardness and
hazardousness? The key to this mystery is their attitude: They regard these
opposing elements not only as obstacles but also as opportunities for merit
and excitement. Just as they were young once, spoon-fed and sheltered from the
evils of the world, they eventually outgrew their attachment to easiness and
developed a taste for challenge. In conclusion, what characterizes them is
their maturity, by contrast with the infantilism of others.
Between these two extremes there is a mediocre compromise, partly mature,
partly infantile. It consists in taking charge of one’s life while taking the
easy way out. Small principles, small realizations, far below one’s potential
for greatness, they are poor excuses for wisdom and success. Potential, that
is the operative word. There can be greatness in apparent smallness and
smallness in apparent greatness; the truth resides in the great or small
actualization of one’s potential, whatever it is.
How does one discover what it is? By making the effort to actualize it in the
ever-renewed and multifaceted act of living. This entails that one push
oneself hard, at the risk of going too far. Measure is an empty abstraction
for anyone who has never exceeded it. Limits should be experienced, not
invented. This experience demands a serious and courageous commitment to
greatness. Steer clear of frivolousness, laziness, and cowardliness; do not
fall prey to them as I did so many times. They are strong temptations that can
assume the form of a cunning philosophy that is unique to losers. Beware of
this snare. Life is a demanding character test; come death, you will have
ample time to rest!
Nostalgic for the old days at the rehabilitation facility when I wrote anyhow
about anything, I once conveniently believed in spontaneous writing as a
guarantee of genuineness. Fortunately I was foolish yet not a complete fool.
After some denial, which involved some nonsense in justification of my
foolishness, I admitted sullenly that my sacrosanct pursuit of genuineness was
in fact a vile indulgence in idiocy. There is nothing spontaneous about the
intelligent conception and intelligible expression of one’s true self, which
is everything but simple. It is a tissue of desires, feelings, ideas, and
memories, caught in a whirl of interactions between the mind and the world.
Either one goes to great lengths to elucidate and formulate the truth about
oneself, and one hits the bull’s-eye, or one talks bullshit – please forgive
my language.
Some people shine at off-the-cuff speeches, as though they were so brilliant
they could avoid saying idiocies when forced to be spontaneous. Make no
mistake; their brilliance is merely one side of the equation. They have spent
years polishing their manner of thinking and speaking, while their knowledge
waxed through learning. Their spontaneity is studied. It is a product of
numerous rehearsals, like the performance of an actor. Nothing great ever
comes easily to anyone, including those who are the most gifted among us.
Superior luck is not human greatness, only a steppingstone toward it. The
stone is given; the stepping is done by the sweat of one’s brow and is made of
a million steps, uphill. To work one’s way up to greatness is comparable to
conquering Mount Everest, the highest peak of the Himalayas. It is an
outstanding achievement with a sense of pride to match.
Laurent Grenier’s writing career spans over twenty years. During
this time he has broadened and deepened his worldview, by dint of much
reflection and study, and in the end has crafted “A Reason for Living,” his
best work to date. Official web site: http://laurentgrenier.com/ARFL.html
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