Thursday, October 6, 2005

1


"I begin then, with my list of truisms, every one of which, I
know, with certainty, to be true."
~ G.E. Moore


Poetic Acceptance is more than just a vaguely emo-teen-ish cutesy title to me - it really is a philosophical premise, a personal truism. There are times when you either accept, change, or go crazy. I suppose it's a bit reminiscent of the serenity prayer. The secret is in the knowing whether to accept a situation or to try to change it. Sometimes, reality in and of itself makes that decision for you - death, for example, cannot be changed, it just is, and must be accepted. (Unless your religious/spiritual beliefs lend to the assumption that death is not final, such as in the case of reincarnation. But speaking in a practical sense, someone else's death, or more precisely, their absence from our lives due to that death, is an unalterable truth.)

That finality and inarguability is probably the hardest part of death to come to grips with, the most difficult to accept, and yet, isn't it easier to not have to make the decision? There is no choice, you simply do what you must. When there is a choice to be made, that decision making process is by far more complicated.

Is a particular situation changeable? With how much effort? Is the effort worth the result? Can you do it alone, or will you need help?

I find that if I can change it on my own, I tend to lean toward toward attempting that change, but if I must rely on someone else, I will normally opt to accept. This isn't laziness or lack of motivation - it is a form of acceptance in itself. I accept that I cannot cause someone else to implement a change on my behalf; they must see that change in a way that benefits them, and in a way that leads them to the willingness to put forth the necessary effort. If they don't, they most likely won't bother.

Unfortunately, it isn't that cut and dried, thanks to the very human emotion we call hope. I hope too much. . . Isn't hope supposed to be a positive emotion?! For me, I wait and hope for far too long that some other individual will see the personal benefit of the change I desire. They rarely do, and I land smack dab in the middle of choice number three... Going crazy trying to change something that I can't, wasting precious time that should be spent coming to the acceptance.

Perhaps I'm learning how close "acceptance" sometimes is to "resignation."


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5 comments:

  1. In some ways acceptance is resignation. Accepting that this is the way it is...resignation. I never thought about it much, but you're right. Hope things get better for you. I like your little poems today.

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  2. I don't know quite why, but this reminded be of Dylan's 'Ballad in Plain D': My friends from the prison, they ask unto me/ "How good, how good does it feel to be free?" / And I answer them most mysteriously, / "Are birds free from the chains of the skyway?"

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  3. Ain't all this the plain ole ever lovin' truth? >sigh< I love you, dear! Always will for being there!
    Hugs! Ya need anything? Hollah!

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  4. We must understand something: we don't accept (perhaps poeticly) because we want to, rather because we must to live . . . in some resembalance of a "normal" life.

    So we co-exist, accept, different phrasing whose meanings, in this case, mirror one another in terms of emotion.

    And then there's bursting out in a painful beast-like howl no matter the number of ears that listen, but that's me.

    Poetic Acceptance: without a doubt we can attain it.

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  5. I'm glad each of you has been struck (stricken?) by this in your own way...

    I'm afraid I've been a bit moody and brooding lately - introspective I suppose. I'm going to blame it on the week of rain and grey weather :)

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