Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
The First Law of Emotional Thermodynamics: Longing is Directly Proportional to Self-Hatred
first edition of Chekov’s Three Sisters (1901)
Before you plunge down the black hole of longing, consider
that desire, particularly for an unattainable object, is directly proportional
to self-hatred. You want only what you can’t have because you hate what you
have. You have to want what you have is the other side of the coin. However, there's something delicious about this search for phantoms. If self-improvement had been all the rage during the 18th and l9th centuries, the romantic movement might never have gotten off the ground and The Sorrows of Young Werther might have been rejected by Goethe’s publishers. On
the other hand there wouldn’t have been any copycat suicides by jilted young
lovers—since people would have fallen for love objects within their ken and in
the absence of self-loathing suicide itself wouldn’t have been an antidote to
anything. Self-esteem might be a nice thing, but it’s a killer of a whole
literary oeuvres. Flaubert famously said “Madame Bovary, c’est moi,” but if
Flaubert hadn’t experienced a hatred for himself and everything around him, if
he hadn’t entertained the notion that there was some kind of new found land that was worth hurting himself and others to attain—as is Emma’s plight—would he
have been able to write the book? There are no Emma Bovarys in utopia. Yes it’s nice to live in the present and develop the Zen way of
thinking in which you treasure every moment, neither regretting the past nor
living for some unattainable future, the Moscow Chekhov’s Three Sisters dream of as
they slog through their dreary provincial existence. But let’s face it, that kind of level-headedness can be
boring too.
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