Print Story I Am Lead...
Diary
By atreides (Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 03:12:55 AM EST) (all tags)
...heavy, worthless yet, under certain conditions, sometimes mistaken for gold.


I'll never be a writer.

I actually planned to submit a story for the Writing Fun Challenge.  My conceit was that I would have chronicled the "eventful" day of the Maltese Falcon.  Not the real one that the Russian tricked Gutman out of.  No, it would have been the fake, heavy and lacquered and for one day "the stuff that dreams are made of".  But, you see, I couldn't write to a deadline.  Hell, I couldn't even start to a deadline.  When I was younger, I thought I wanted to write, but I eventually realized that I don't have the spark in me to do so.  And so, I'll never be a writer.

I'll never be a lawyer.

I never actually had the desire to go into the law as a profession but I figured out a while ago that law firms always have work and l aways have clients and therefore always have money.  They are safe and so I work in the law.  But a couple of weeks ago, I had to go to a nearby town (Smithville, if you must know) to fight a speeding ticket.  I spent all day waiting for my chance to state my case.  I was cool.  I was confident.  I was charming.  And then I sat before the judge and all my preparations flew out of my skull, all my arguments melted away like ice.  In the end, his Honor asked me why I even bothered coming before him.  I had nothing to say in my own defense and he suggested that the next I found myself in this situation, I should call a lawyer. 

I'll never be a linguist.

I like language.  I like it a lot.  But what use has it been to me?  I've never been to Vatican City so my best other language is useless except for reading the occasional statue dedication or crest motto.  I couldn't get up early enough to do well with Greek in college.  I never went out and found a rabbi or a class or something similar to help me continue my self education in Hebrew.  And Russian?  You know, I could give you the detailed positions and compositions of military units before I could ask you how you felt.  And now, even that seems so terribly ephemeral in my mind.  It slips away and I just don't have the strength to chase it anymore.

I'll never be an astronomer.

When I was young, I could think of no greater way to spend my life than to devote it to the night sky.  I was so young and so naive.  How could I not know that for six thousand years and more men had been cataloging and analyzing that same sky, trying to plumb its secrets and, by doing so, know the mind of God?  But that was what I wanted.  And then I saw reality.  Did you know that just about every advanced form of mathematics was created for the sake of astronomy?  I went far enough that the numbers ceased to be numbers and the wonder died in me.  Or maybe it was the other way around. I don't know.  It's been far too long since I even thought about it.  The last time I was out at McDonald Observatory, I ran into a guy I went to College with.  He was Director of Visitor Programs.  Maybe that could have been me. 

I'll never be a strategist.

I've read so many of them: Master Sun, Clausewitz, Miyamoto, Rommel, Caesar.  I've read of so many brilliant men: Alexander, Scott, Basil and Leo, Pericles, Solomon.  I know their stories and their times.  I know how they moved and why and what came of those master strokes and how they fought both the great wars and the small battles.  I thought that, maybe, just maybe, if I could synthesize the logic and the patterns into myself, maybe I could find the path and the insight to work around anything that fell into the way of my journey.  But it doesn't work.  Not for me, anyway.  I see each stone they have played on their own boards but there is no ear redding move for me.  Hell, there isn't even the simplicity of black and white multiplying.  There is only grey and all too often, the grey of regret.

I'll never be sure of myself.

I look back and I see mistakes stretching back to my earliest days.  I screwed up in the law.  I screwed up in the bars.  I screwed up with my friends and I screwed up in the Army.  I screwed up in College, with my parents and my grandparents, high school, Junior high, elementary, kindergarten...  I screwed up with men and women and when I was a child, I screwed up with boys and girls.  I feel like Coyote some days: knowing what is wise and right because I've done it every other way already.  As the man said, I'd trade a little growth to even remember a little happiness.

And why am I telling you all this?

Because I can only define myself by what I am not, not by what I am.  I only see my failure.

Because in a month, I will be a husband.  And I can't fail.

One day, I will be a father.  And I can't fail.

There will be too many hearts wrapped up in what I do, my own least of all.  And too many lives.  And what happens if I fail again?

< Dirty Fucking Hippies | WFC Eye Ex - The Return of the It Narrative - It's Votin' Time! >
I Am Lead... | 15 comments (15 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback
Fear of failure by Breaker (4.00 / 1) #1 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 04:16:49 AM EST
Will keep you on the straight and narrow.  Just don't let it paralyse you.

You're a good man, atreides, don't ever lose sight of that.  Perhaps in the past you have not been, but  who can claim to have been perfect all of their lives?

There is a difference between making mistakes and learning from them, and bludgeoning on regardless of who gets hurt.




ATTENTION: NEGATIVE NELLIE INFIDEL by ammoniacal (4.00 / 8) #2 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 05:05:38 AM EST
You dust yourself the fuck off and get back on the horse.

You know, you make your own reality and if you really believe in what you want and are persistent about it and don't falter in your vision, you will create your own future. This shit works, man.

This coomenat has be n soidnsord by hurricanbe ice malt liqur


Johnny Hustle by lm (4.00 / 4) #3 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 06:59:00 AM EST
Despite being a total fucktard and gambling addict (not that those two things necessarily go together), Pete Rose once said  something rather remarkable. Famed for being one of the best all around ball players, he was once asked why he was so good at so much. His response was that most people practice what they're already good at because it's more fun but he spent his time practicing what he was bad at.

So if you're worried about being a bad husband or a bad father, practice at it.


There is no more degenerate kind of state than that in which the richest are supposed to be the best.
Cicero, The Republic


Life... by ana (4.00 / 2) #4 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 07:22:58 AM EST
is a series of compromises.

I also studied Latin in college. Last night I found myself being profoundly grateful I'd done that, even though I'll probably never actually be able to read Cicero without a dictionary and a grammar and a lot of thought. But I started Latin because I fell in love with the Latin Rite, and now I spend (way too much of?) my spare time on sacred music of the Renaissance, which is, yes, in Latin.

And I am an astronomer; I came into it through the mathematics, actually. I double majored in physics and math, and found the two of them meeting in astronomy. But I'll never be particularly good at it, because, looking at the already voluminous literature (perhaps 8 feet of shelf space per year of new results, and that's just the major US journal), I'm not sure I have that much to contribute to all that. So I have a support role, which suits me well.

And yeah. The whole marriage thing. It's the hardest job you'll ever love. Best of luck, and keep on keeping on. Remember the magic words ("Yes, dear").

Seriously, though, when we were married iGrrrl gave us the following excellent advice: Most disagreements come in one of two forms. One, something about money, and Two, some variation on "What do you mean, you can't read my mind?"

L'Chaim

"And this ... is a piece of Synergy." --Kellnerin


Kak dela? by ambrosen (4.00 / 1) #5 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 07:26:54 AM EST
Xorosho, spasibo.

And even though my last trip abroad was to a country which alternates between Cyrillic and Latin alphabets, in a Slavic language, I still can't transliterate the Russian anything like as well as I want.

Hey, you may not have a surfeit of happiness in your history (and today I'm feeling in the exact same place), but you've got it now, right?

You're not going to fail, anyway.

And posting things like this, I think succumbing to hubris is unlikely, too.



It's not "if," it's "when." by blixco (4.00 / 3) #6 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 07:50:22 AM EST
And preparation is key.  I fail roughly four times a day, sometimes a lot more, sometimes less but with more significance.  Sometimes it's a routine maintenance thing, like I forget what the command is in a certain OS to do a certain chain of things.  Sometimes I get home and I forget that I am married.  Sometimes I spend recklessly on alcohol and guns.

Not at the same time, mind.

The best part about fucking up is, you get to fuck up.  You can fail because you're not in outer space with one chance left to lasso some doomsday satellite heading for the coastline to nuke us all.  You can fail because you're human and it's what we do to get better.

We fuck up.  It's what we do.

The best, very best part of it is: we learn.
---------------------------------
"You bring the weasel, I'll bring the whiskey." - kellnerin


a couple of things... by clock (4.00 / 3) #7 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 08:37:03 AM EST
first, you can't be where you are without having been where and who you were.  it sucks, but it's true.

mistakes are made.  i tell people i make about a dozen of them before my first cup of coffee.  it's true.  marriage?  you'll both make mistakes and that's cool.  as long as you realize that nobody's perfect, you're good to go.  never forget the following phrases: "i don't know."  "i'm sorry."  "i love you."  "thank you."  keep those in your vocabulary and you should be good to go.

as a dad?  i've got nothing.  near as i can tell after my advanced 7 months in the job of father to a free-breathing boy is:  there is no room for error.  by error of course i mean the catastrophic kind.  failing to fasten a diaper perfectly only causes more laundry.  teaching hate or anger inadvertently is a complete failure.  it's a tight line that needs to be watched.  you?  you'll be fine.

and finally, never accept advice from strangers on the intarwebz.  fortunately, we don't have strangers here...well, none are stranger than any other.  so you're in luck!

one month!  i'm excited for you!  see you soon my friend...


Clock is right. [nt] --vorheesleatherface



HAZARD WARNING by Rogerborg (4.00 / 3) #8 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 09:00:14 AM EST
Until I read the part about you being a husband in the future, I was 100% sure that I was reading a blixco diary.

-
Metus amatores matrum compescit, non clementia.


If many of the 'great' men . . . by slozo (4.00 / 2) #9 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 10:09:28 AM EST
. . . you mentioned defined themselves by their actions that weren't deemed 'successful', they'd all have been considered failures.

Give the woman who is going to marry you some credit - do you think she would choose some loser who will likely fail in life? I don't think so.

Make a list on a sheet of paper - things you are most proud of, your best accomplishments, your greatest achievements. Then write down what you want to accomplish/do in the future, even if it's as a husband or father.

I'm sure you can do it, buddy.



Thomas Edison said by webwench (4.00 / 3) #10 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 10:12:58 AM EST
"I have not failed 700 times. I have not failed once. I have succeeded in proving that those 700 ways will not work. When I have eliminated the ways that will not work, I will find the way that will work."

Failed here and there? Welcome to the club :)

Getting more attention than you since 1998. Ya ya!


Failure by ucblockhead (4.00 / 1) #11 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 01:44:02 PM EST
Everyone feels like a failure at some point. Remember, Caesar stood at the grave of Alexander at 33 and despaired at how little he'd made of his life.

Being a good husband and a good father merely takes good faith and good effort and honestly, if you are worried about whether you are going to be a good father you are already a better father than average.
----
ウセーバラケダ


If there is one thing I've learned the last year.. by R343L (4.00 / 2) #12 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 02:24:05 PM EST
It's that if I let a previous failure stop me from doing something else or trying again, I just get to be sad and disappointed with myself for the rest of my life. And that would just suck, so I try not to. I don't always succeed, but hey, I can try again!

Or as someone else said: you pick yourself up, dust yourself off and keep going.

Rachael

(Also, regarding confidence, see the 256 quote below ... it turns out those confident people doubt themselves plenty, but they just shrug it off. 256 conveniently worded it a way I liked recently.)

"There will be time, there will be time / To prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet." -- Eliot


it is only failure by StackyMcRacky (4.00 / 2) #13 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 03:01:07 PM EST
if you do not learn from your mistake.

I'm stoked about seeing you a month from now!!



damnit by LilFlightTest (2.00 / 0) #14 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 09:36:46 PM EST
where'd my time to RSVP go?

we had really hoped to be able to make it...but now it's looking like we probably can't afford to. this makes me sad.
---------
if de-virgination results in me being able to birth hammerhead sharks, SIGN ME UP!!! --misslake


Don't worry about it. :) by atreides (2.00 / 0) #15 Tue Apr 01, 2008 at 10:28:07 PM EST
There are a lot of people who can't come from much closer than you guys.  Well, believe me, if I had the money, I would have flown you guys down here. :)

He sails from world to world in a flying tomb, serving gods who eat hope.
[ Parent ]

I Am Lead... | 15 comments (15 topical, 0 hidden) | Trackback