Not the Answer, but a Nice Try |
I found a note in my Google calendar this morning. It popped
up as a reminder on the phone with today’s date and the words ‘Find Meaning of
Life’. Between ‘Buy new socks’, and ‘Phone insurance about drain’, I had
remotely prompted myself to resolve the mystery of our presence in the
universe.
I was rather surprised by this. I have no memory of placing
this reminder in the calendar, nor any idea why I should have chosen,
presumably some time ago, this particular Monday morning to begin the search
for purpose.
I am not nagged by the sense that my life is without
meaning. In the end, it probably is, but I’m perfectly happy with it. So far
the only sign of mid-life crisis I have observed in myself is the increasingly
urgent desire for a microlight aircraft, which is likely to remain unfulfilled,
because apart from the price of them, Mrs Hickory would have to take a bottle
of Valium every time I went up in it.
My life is not empty, I barely have time to analyse the things
I’m not doing because of everything I am doing, and I have no idea what the
message refers to. Perhaps it was a book, or the Monty Python film, that I wanted
to hunt up, or a reference to something I half-remembered reading or writing
long ago. Or maybe Cupertino intervened. I shall probably never know.
But I have, as a result, spent the day distracted by the
responsibility I had accidentally given myself. Until I finish the task, I can’t
tap the screen to illuminate the green tick which decrees it done, and it will
keep appearing, day after day. Tomorrow I shall try again. The answer must lie
somewhere. If there is one, that is. I hope so. I have a green box to tick.
4 comments:
"Tomorrow I shall try again" you wrote.
There's your answer.
(At least that's as good as any other I can think of.)
Green box can now get ticked?
Thank you very much! Problem solved. Box ticked.
My life is not empty, I barely have time to analyse the things I’m not doing because of everything I am doing, and I have no idea what the message refers to.
Has to be the first paragraph of your new book.
I had thought of that. In fact it was very hard not to turn it into a story rather than just tell the anecdote. I can see Paul Auster starting a book that way, and if he can do it...
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