It is a sad trick.
Every single one of us, the intellectual, the intelligent,
the keep-to-myself loner, the extravagant, the miser, the man in the gangly
t-shirt across the street, the taxi-driver who refused you the ride, the
secret-admirer, the superficial babe flaunting her red nailpaint, the everyone
else – each one of us – is looking for that one thing that will make our lives
better. That one single consciousness or that fragmented one, which will
complete if not compliment ours.
That one consciousness that we hope to draw from, that we
hope to contribute to, in the eventual process of completion or fragmentation. That one
consciousness that could make us feel a little less irrelevant. The one
consciousness that could help us get an inch closer to the semblance of
happiness, one moment at a time. In the process, evolution is inevitable –
physically, metaphysically. The more we evolve the more attached we get to
those that have been witness to and have in some way partaken and participated
in the person we are today and the one we will become tomorrow. Perhaps, that is why it is so
difficult to give up on old friends, childhood sweethearts, long-lost lovers,
family, pets, however they may have failed you; for each of them have projected
a part of themselves unto our present self. That is perhaps why, we will never
be able to give up on love.
Evolution of love is a curious process. It simultaneously estranges
you and makes you bond stronger with the people most relevant in the process. Born
with a single consciousness, we are designed to succumb to loneliness, and
thereafter seek that other consciousness that will draw our energies into theirs
and replenish theirs from ours. That which will fill in those voids, you never knew
existed. And in the process make you so much more aware of the person you are,
inevitably making you become a different person than you were yesterday,
inevitably thus estranging you, even if a wee bit from everyone who had this
set perception of you.
Love is perhaps the design flaw then.
The moment you
recognize an attraction, you rush with all your might to know the person, to
know yourself around the person, projecting
and eventually imbibing a part of them into you and a part of you unto
them. You are always looking for some form of acknowledgment that would somehow
concur with your projected person, and the sooner you reach there, you are
looking to reach the next. It is an abyss that sucks you into it, deeper, each
time you reach a check-point. Like that game, where you are craving to reach
the next level. But once you have, it’s done with. Then it’s boring to go back
and play from stage 1, because you already know of the hidden trapdoors, as
much as you do of the crystals that will fetch you bonus points. The excitement
naturally wanes. The other trick is to design the unending loop, where, at
each stage you may or may not increase the difficulty level after a point, but
you make minor changes in design, shuffle the trapdoors a little, trick and game
the system to give you the bonus points at some familiar intervals, at others
to just be a futile attempt at bonuses. While you may grudge the
not-always-rewarding reward system, at least you will keep playing. The programmer
has had his victory.
Human relationships are a tad bit more complex that way.
Gaming the system, seems trickery – an unnatural effort – and hence not always
appreciated. We like to believe that the system would be a self-updating game – and thereby fail to appreciate the effort our partner may put into actually gaming the system. We fail to recognize that that is also an
attempt. We forget that the person we met is not the person who is and the
person who will be. In our defence, acceptance is not always the easiest; not
always the most natural course of selection. As much as we like the new, some
more than others, we all take comfort in familiarity. That is perhaps why we
re-read the same books, re-watch the same films, revisit photographs, play the
same song on a loop, go back to our favourite places, go back to that one place
for drinks, talk to the same people about the same things, succumb to the same
mistakes. Even new mistakes are scary – unchartered territory they are. And
while we like to imagine ourselves wiser after every mistake, we are merely
being gamed. Perhaps that is why they say only unrequited love can last. For it
is not blemished by the regularity of familiarity.
Yet familiarity is what we strive to achieve; what we are
most comfortable with.
Wiser men and women have realized it, talked about it at
length – in books, in movies, in real life. Yet we are all entrapped in it. It
is indeed a sad trick.
nirbondho. I wish I had known a foreign word for it.
ReplyDeleteDo we really get wiser with every mistake? Or is it, like you put it, one mix of variable mistakes that we're past... and onward to the next one? It's hard to tell. Getting past a mistake merely means beckoning to the next one.
ReplyDeleteThere's no wise person and there's no fool. There's only one who can remain happy in his/her own company, and one who can't. That's not to say one should must all social ties, merely not to expect any of them to linger.
Just that. Keep walking :)