Recently I met up with a dear friend, fellow artist, and mentor of mine. I asked if she had some time to spare to hear me out. I am making some changes in my artistic journey and I felt it was time to bring other people in to the mix to help me think things through. We met up at a beautiful coffee shop in St. Paul, MN. With her tea in hand and a smile on her face, she sat down and asked, "So how can I help you, Mr. Merchant?" I immediately began to talk about trying to get more focused and organized as an artist. At this moment I am fuzzy about what all details I shared because, honestly, I felt like I was on autopilot at the time. I didn't have a checklist or anything of that sort in front me during that conversation. I was totally speaking from the heart and relaying what I was feeling. Nothing dramatic. Just being true about what was up. My friend wasted no time in asking me some point-blank questions. Questions that I had NEVER thought to ask myself.
The first question was "What don't you trust about yourself?" Boom! I was almost frozen in time. This was real! I interpreted that question as "How am I getting in my own way?" This was not a question I could answer in 10 minutes; hell, not even in a week. It trips me out when I think of all the ways I might have subconsciously stifled my own growth - my own freedom. I could write a series of blogs on that alone. But wait...it gets better. As if my friend didn't give me enough to think about just off of that question, she hit me with this little assignment: "Look up the word "Like" in the dictionary. Then...each day, work on eliminating the word "Like" from your vocabulary." Boom #2! So I did look up the word "Like," and this is its definition when used as a verb, with and/or without a subject:
like
2 /laɪk/ Show Spelled [lahyk] Show IPA verb,liked, lik·ing, noun
–verb (used with object)
1.
to take pleasure in; find agreeable or congenial: We all liked the concert.
2.
to regard with favor; have a kindly or friendly feeling for (a person, group, etc.); find attractive: His parents like me and I like them.
3.
to wish or prefer: You can do exactly as you like while you are a guest here.
–verb (used without object)
4.
to feel inclined; wish: We'll have lunch whenever you like.
5.
Archaic. to suit the tastes or wishes; please.
That being said, you might ask yourself - hell, I am still asking myself, "So what's up with this taking the word "like" out of the equation?" This is how I have come to understand it so far. In order for me to truly free myself from mainstream, dominant culture thinking and expectations, how I think, how I live, and especially how I create cannot be based upon whether others will like what I do, how I think, or what I say. I consider it a tragedy within our global society when we sacrifice our true selves at the altar of acceptance. Unfortunately, these sacrifices are taking place more and more frequently. There are too many reasons to name as to why one would go out of their way to be liked (And it is not limited to just adolescents and young adults. So-called "mature" grown folks, I'll say, over the age of 35, are jumping into the fire, too.) I feel that it comes down to the fact that this society is becoming more dangerous in every way and the risk of standing up for yourself and not taking the oath to be part of the status quo is even greater. I mean, seriously!? Are people who see their world differently and are not living and creating for the loving cup of being liked and accepted that much of a threat? Uh oh! Better raise the terror threat level to orange! But back to being free. Western society can be extremely hypocritical, fickle, and out-and-out stank in its treatment of other human beings who do their thing, their way. But my dear freedom fighters - we're not on the playground anymore. I graduated from high school two decades ago. That whole scene is over. Who are YOU? What rocks YOUR world?
It sounds like I am waging war on the word "Like." Well, in a way, I am. The more time I spend taking a good look at this, the more free I become. My real friends know the deal, so they don't need the lecture all over again. However, there are those who "mean well" that feel that it is their duty to take it upon themselves to tell me what they think I should do. Why? Because in the end, if I lived according to how they would like, then perhaps, they could relate to me better. They would like me better. Hmmmmm... To those who "mean well," what exactly do you mean?
Once again, I am speaking for me. I feel I really need to be consistent about clarifying that because it is important for me to not confuse my own values with my respect for humanity. It is NOT my desire to be the "morality police." I am distrustful of the actual police, so why would I even go there? My main point is that this whole thing about being liked is worth examining. I continue to examine this in my own life daily and will write more about this in future blogs as my mind continues to develop, change and understand my own world...in between.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
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