A Pass on Real Life
Back in 2004, Demetri Martin wrote a week-long journal for Slate and briefly mentioned the time he decided to grow a mustache. What he admits is that despite really wanting to try one and hoping it would be well received, he’d walk up to co-workers and say, “I’m growing a mustache. Looks pretty ridiculous, doesn’t it?” He was so uncomfortable with the thought of people not liking it that he went around and convinced them that they shouldn’t.
It struck me that benign examples like this belie how powerful that emotion can be. This deep, churning insecurity propels people toward incredible ends. Afraid of what prying eyes may turn up, the mind exhibits unparalleled skill in delegitimizing, preempting and fending off judgment. But regardless of how it is channeled, disingeneousness leads to tainted, meaningless results.
It’s a similar strategy used by a kid we all knew in high school, the one who grew his hair out funny. Maybe it was a mullet or an afro or dyed strangely. While everyone else is worried about their appearance, he stands alone because the issue is no longer on the table. See, it’s meant to be funny. If he wanted to, he could do it like everyone else, he’s choosing not to. But if he gets attention for it, say girls like to play with it, naturally he doesn’t tell himself it’s because of the joke and therefore not him. All of the upside, none of the risk.
What this really is, of course, is the ideal intellectual position. The idea of defending yourself against criticism while simultaneously declaring that it has no jurisdiction over you. The idea that “Hey, we don’t care what you think about our personal lives, but there are tribes in New Guinea that have a totally different concept of gender.”
It is a reaction that is deeply rooted in fear. It is what children do. As they develop into their teens, they “strike a pose that is simultaneously rebellious and lackadaisical.” They’ve looked backwards and forwards and noticed a disturbing trend, that their responsibilities are increasing at a dramatic rate while the amount of fun, which seemed to be endless just a few years back, is showing signs of slowing down. At this point of optimal freedom and diminished accountability, they’d like to freeze, to “stay in place.”
In a way, you could think of Lady Gaga as the queen of this movement. Self-discomfort is such a motive, driving force that it is what transports a person from here to here. Take away the trappings and the costumes, is there really any difference between her and someone like Britney Spears? She’s part of the same machine. She uses the same songwriters, the same marketing, exploits the same stereotypes. But for some reason, she wants us to know that it’s different. For her, it is ironic. You see, she used to do Iron Maiden covers at bars in the East Village. Does this mean something? Maybe it’s avant-garde and provocative instead of trite and artificial. Or maybe it’s all too confusing and we’ll never know.
In any uncomfortable situation – of which, deciding the type of life you’re to live is one of the most stressful – our doubts can push us to do anything, anything that creates certainty. Irony and absurdity can be ultimate diffusions of this tension, and so can aggression, posturing and non-engagement. Deciding to grow a mustache? Make fun of it while secretly hoping someone will tell you they like. Better yet, grow a comical mustache that nobody gets. If they can’t tell if you like it, then they can’t judge it. Crisis averted.
We now see this writ large. Instead of outgrowing it, we’ve embraced it. Think about the prevalence of irony in hipster culture. At the root of that irony is loathing. Loathing comes from ignorance and fear, two powerful feelings that associated with entering a new era. It is responsible for so much of what is wrong with internet culture. People yell and scream and rant on blogs because they’re filled with doubts which they hope to god will never be illuminated. They follow this band for three months and drop it for another because loyalty requires sincerity and sincerity depends on honesty – risks with too much downside.
But where does this transference of insecurity take us? The result is a pass on the burdens of real life. It becomes easier to dig at the tenets of evolution and the human nature in order to concoct some scientific justification for a decision than to take a stand and deal with it. Of course individual choice can be judged. What a masturbatory discussion to even be having. In fact, in asserting that it cannot be, you’re admitting that it often is and will continue to be but that you happen to not like it.
The solution is to not be so fucking hard on yourself. You become afraid of what people will see when they look at you only if you think their conclusions can change things. This is false. Ease up and look internally with calmness and dispassion. Think about your flaws as burrs or splinters that have been unnecessarily affecting your walk. Discard them and move on. Don’t pick at them shamefully in the dark and overcompensate during the day. There’s no need to use every issue as a cat’s paw to scratch at yourself or some vague insecurity. It’s okay. The only thing that’s truly embarrassing is to become some preposterous douche you hardly recognize because you can’t stand the prospect of being genuine and hated for it.
Ryan,
I love the blog and follow it regularly. Great meditations on how to apply a Stoic worldview to a modern life. The one thing I would ask is that you do a brief copy edit before you post. Things like:
“really wanting to do try one ” [do?]
“belie what how powerful” [what?]
“by kid we all knew in high school” [by a kid?]
“because you can’t the prospect of being genuine and hated for it.” [can’t the prospect? do you mean can’t deal with the prospect?]
are distracting.
Your content is phenomenal, your style is crisp and clear, but the flagrant typos detract from the overall impact. Given the quality of the thought in your posts, I think they are worth a grammar check.
Best,
-A.
Hmm the way you describe hipsters is eerily similar to how Danes 18 to 35 act. In Copenhagen that is. Super cool, with designer wear, and then try to pull off an “I don’t give a fuck attitude”. While clearly putting a hell of a lot of effort into being trendy.
It goes with a culture where standing out is punished outwardly yet secretly celebrated (similar to the Japanese) and a cradle to grave welfare state that emphasizes safety and collective harmony over individual achievement and risk.
This is the looking-glass self. Charles Horton Cooley’s looking-glass theory states that our self-image is derived from how we think others see us.
Why we try so hard to make others think favorably of us, I’ll never understand. Because the only person who needs to like you is the one staring back at you in the mirror.
It’s about control. By preempting or otherwise framing possible criticism eliminates any genuine interaction with other people, solipsism through sophistry.
Related: I know a couple of guys in my classes who get pretty good marks but make a point of showing how they “don’t study”. For sure, their mark as a function of effort is exceptionally high, but I’d rather get high marks and pay the cost of working for them.
That was really fantastic.
definitely not one of your biggest fans anymore but this post was excellent.
Josh, we try hard because of the rewards:
– Society favors those who are good looking.
– There is a huge net benefit to fitting into some class or subculture of society and that means playing by the ingroup’s rules.
– We want people to respect us.
– While the attitude of the kid with the afro is ideal the style certainly isn’t – who wants to be an outcast?
Your statement that ‘the only person who needs to like you is yourself’ is sitting wrong with me. I’m sure we all know a lot of people who think they’re awesome but are anything but (Ryan was just talking about this over the last few weeks). Besides, I don’t know about you but I’d be pretty upset if I was the only one who liked me.
Ryan this was a solid post. Amazing insight.
Dude, what a fantastic fucking post. I visited some people over thanksgiving, some friends of ours (a chef and his wife) from NYC who moved up north and started an awesome restaurant. Lots of people were there and it was the first time in awhile where I was relaxing and bullshitting around strangers who were much older – I ended up getting real stoned one night and turning paranoid and emotionally insecure, and I bet that came through in my actions and the things I said. When stuff like that happens, I used to crawl into a hole of insecurity and have the tendency to unnecessarily apologize for what I said or did the night before. This time however, I very much copied the sequence of reasoning from your post – 1) others’ conclusions aren’t really going to change anything, really 2) I’m okay, I was just on drugs and said a few stupid things, 3) DON’T overcompensate and start apologizing for fucking everything. Its okay to have bared a part of yourself and have it judged (even if it was pot-fueled), just keep brushing the burrs off and walking.
Hope you had a good thanksgiving man.
On the other hand, you could ask yourself whether “I’m ok I was just on drugs” isn’t literally a pass on the responsibilities of real life.
Justin-
Being a lonely outcast would keep you from reaping the rewards society gives to those who join up, follow suit, and “play by the rules”. I’d speculate that you enjoy those rewards, no? Therefore not getting those things would make you unhappy and cause you to not look upon your reflection took positively. A life of rebellion is one that is evidently not for you.
Hi Ryan, great article. Reading this sparked my interest in Lady Gaga so I did some research. It turns out she writes songs for Britney Spears; they don’t use the same songwriter.
http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/music/article5325327.ece?token=null&offset=12&page=2
Doesn’t invalidate the point you’re trying to make or anything, but I came across it and thought I’d let you know.
“Loathing comes from ignorance and fear”
That’s a broad barrelled statement that I think is fundamentally incorrect.
Loathing I think far more commonly comes from Anger and a sense of being powerless.
I loathe many things that I know a great deal about. No matter how much I know about Yawehistic cults and organised religion in the west, I’m powerless to meaningfully influence the things that make me angry about them.
I think you’re seeing the hipster self loathing and ‘If I can’t be a movie star, then fuck everyone’ mentality – which is coupled with a shitload of ignorance and fear I admit – and seeing that as the source of the loathing – rather than another symptom.
I should probably be wearing skinny red jeans and cutting myself while I say this – but Hipster culture’s biggest flaws are a reflection of the rage of the cultural group that came before it.
In between Gen X and Gen Y, there’s a bunch of people who have our strongest cultural influences in that period between Kurt Cobain’s death and the popular success of My Chemical Romance.
There’s not a cute name for the middle ground – but Gen Y is an annoying echo of that cultural period. It’s a bunch of douche bags taking the obsession with Irony, Sarcasm and Anger at everything and missing the point alternately.
I feel like a geriatric hippy complaining about modern dope heads that’ve missed the point. But it irks me that the angers and causes of all the people I admired and idolized – and hell my own angers, causes, passions and vexations are being increasingly recast as a product of whiny douche bags with unsatisfied narcissism issues.
Maybe I’m romanticising my own youth – but I remember it was cool to hate things because they were fucked up and needed to be fixed. It seems like now it’s cool to hate things because you’re not a celebrity.
Matt Damon I think said in an interview on Australian television years ago, that once upon a time people were famous because they were special. Sometime in the last 20 or so years, we’ve shifted towards (and run headlong to embrace) the idea that now people are special because they’re famous. I think at the core of pretty much every hipster moron’s loathing is a fundamental anger that they aren’t famous and therefore aren’t special. And fundamentally – they’re powerless to change that.
You outdid yourself Holiday. It’s always a pleasure to take a glimpse in the inner workings of another human being.