"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Math Rules Everything Around Me

In keeping with my recent wedding-borne inquiry into default notions of romantic future, the arc of the story, and also owing to the fact that I finished my most recent book conquest -- the inestimable Mountains Beyond Mountains (we're helping out PIH w/their drupals at chapter3) -- I've been considering the possibilities.

Fact: to the best of my knowledge all but a recent few of my significant romantic interests (the "old flame" category) are now married, engaged to be married, or have been married. Some of them even have children. This would seem to suggest that the kinds of girls I've been into over the years are the marrying kind. Also it would seem to suggest that my future more likely than not lies in undiscovered country.

Counter-Fact: I haven't been in any relationships lasting a year or more, and have never lived with a lover. Also, to put it diplomatically, I don't have a strong track record of fidelity.

Fact: I really really like kids. I've always loved children, was a babysitter as a young man, and I've gotten into arguments with people who suggest that it's morally questionable to bring new ones into the world (as opposed to say adopting). I seem to have a pretty strong desire to pass on my DNA.

Counter-Fact: the particular circumstances of my life (massive work, lack of steady location, etc) are not conducive to settling down. I've also shown a particular affinity for rambling, as well as a resistance to compromising personal goals or priorities for the sake of others.

This is how I tend to think, but really this kind of score-carding is bullshit, a truth I'm glad to realize. What I'm interested is not an evaluation of my worth or readiness as a comrade in nesting, but rather some kind of concept of my purpose and aim in a life of love. Looking back, I've variously taken on the gestalt of hopeless romantic or shameless hedonist, both with some success and some failure. Neither of these seem particularly apropos now. Some new fantasy of love awaits.

I recently invented the idea of "power dating" for myself, partly because I liked the phrase linguistically, and partly because it seemed like a decently dirty criterion to evaluate potential opportunities. However, what I find really is that I need some kind of objective, goal, or at least understanding of method. Putting aside things I want theoretically in some far-off future, what am I looking for in the precious present? That's a good fucking question.

For now, I'm still grappling with the unknown, but actually considering this is leading me to permit a whole universe of potentialities, all of which embrace the "facts" but none of which fit into some Leave It To Beaver narrative. More than that, getting out from under the weight of figuring this all out -- seeing it as a fascinating question of life rather than a problem to be resolved, hopefully in the next five to six years -- is liberating.

Responses

FACT: Drupal Set Message-Josh needs love
COUNTER FACT: Drupal Set Message-Josh hides from love in Laptop

The fundamental problem with the scorecard-esque examination of matters of the heart is that it has a tendency to oversimplify and sterilize the complex and murky waters being examined. Not that it's wrong to use this method of self-examination, it isn't bullshit in and of itself... It just has the potential to become bullshit if you aren't following up the facts you compile about yourself and your situation with the infamous question of "Why?"

I'd wager both of your presented counter-points have plenty of underlying details worthy of examining if you were to ask yourself.... and from there you can accept things for what they are, learn from what you can, try to figure out what you can and cannot change... and then figure out how from there how to get where you want to be.

The thing about life is that it isn't the same as what you get prepackaged in a book or a movie or a TV show or a play... Even the most well developed story pales in comparison in terms of complexity to how we experience things in real life... As much as we may desire things to resolve themselves as seamlessly as they do in our entertainment, life is usually a hell of a lot more messy than that.... and I've found it a waste of energy to wish for things to be so simple.

Of the many ways to navigate through life, my method (if you can even call it that, it's probably more of a guiding philosophy) goes a little something like this...

  1. Sharing is sacred. The stories, experience, and knowledge that others share with us and what we share with others is valuable and to be treasured, respected and learned from.
  2. Question everything you can, and realize and accept that not every question will have an answer, and that answers to questions may change in time.
  3. Love unconditionally.
  4. Forgive others.
  5. Accept and welcome the unexpected, it's probably better than what you had planned.

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