Sunday, September 07, 2008

You can make it! bla

WARNING: THIS POST IS FULL OF PERSONAL OPINIONS THAT YOU MIGHT FIND EXTREMELY EGOISTIC AND DISTURBING. YOU WILL FEEL LIKE I HAVE NO RIGHT TO JUDGE PEOPLE LIKE THIS. BUT THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I THINK. THIS IS WHO I AM. AT LEAST I AM BEING HONEST.


 There's one good thing about me(among a million others), I think before I do/say anything. Only, I am very fast in my thinking process. So, most people will take me to be impulsive. If you still recall the force versus time graph and the area-under-the-curve thing it will be easier for you to get my point. I am consistently/continuously impulsive.


I am impatient only when I know something is not worth it. For, know this for sure, I have traced in the series of events a pattern that so closely matches many other templates in my head, that I immediately know what lies ahead. It's more of mathematical induction customized to a somewhat wider (and grimmer) event space.
I notice patterns in things very easily. That is not to say I generalize. I don't. Not here. My inductions are tailored based specifically on my past interactions with the person concerned. These interactions are not considered independent of the situations/circumstances in which they took place. So, you could say I have, at least to my belief, a fair and logical way of judging people and weighing out to them what they deserve to be rationed.


You will notice that this system cannot work when I meet someone new. I have no previous data concerning that individual. In these cases I use a very wide band band-pass filter. This is the only stage where I do generalize people to an extent, to weed out the absolute scum. (Yes, you may insist that they are different people, and not necessarily scum, but i don't care.) I am almost never wrong in this part. Generalization isn't always very bad, I have come to see. There are some traits that I simply will not stand. 


If the person concerned passes this first filter, I put him/her into the observation stage. This can range from one day to several months depending on how dubious or dynamic the characters are. Now they start developing a space for themselves as individuals and I stop referring to templates when I look at them. I keep taking mental notes, sometimes sub-conscious. 
Now there are some people I trust and rely on completely. Implicitly. In fact they might not even have to undergo the stages mentioned earlier. These are very very few people. There may be some that I don't see in months. Then there are some I see almost every other day. When it comes to these people, I never ever judge them and I will forgive them no matter what they do to me. I may not forgive them for what they do to others however.
If you have had the patience to read this far, I must tell you, it's not at all as elaborate as it sounds. It's so organized and fast that you will think I am acting on impulse. And in case you have jumped to this part looking for something less taxing on the brains, I suggest you skip this post. I promise not to hate you for it.
There are two things I look for in a person. 
  1. How passionate is s/he about something/anything that she/he loves. How far will s/he go for it. It may be music, it may be physics, it may be photography, it may be another person, it may be just walking.
  2. How consistent is s/he about her/his passion. Can she/he love it day in day out? So much that s/he will never get tired of it? So much that s/he could take on the world for it?
  3. How does the person treat a person/thing that can be of no consequence to her/him ever?

I do not like people who get bored of things easily. Boredom is not necessarily a bad thing. There can be subtle joys in it. For me, life's greatest joy and mystery is monotony, boredom. It strings moments together to make one life. When one looks for changes and avenues because one is bored, it is a sign of lack of empathy. An inner emptiness. I am not against change. I love changes. But a love for change that springs from boredom is a symptom of an ailing mind. An escapist soul.

4 comments:

  1. Of all that you wrote in this post, might I suggest that you knowingly or unknowingly (which I *obviously* don't presume) consider yourself to be God (with the capital "G" ofcourse), but God that you be, you know or so would I presume you know, that that scope of your Godliness (if I can call *that*) is your own(?) world, that is: a God of *your world* (?) And if that be so, the question which rises next is: how do you draw the line to demarcate your world from the Other's? Is it not a perpetual seeking of that very (might as well call it) ephemeral "border", that which is leading you to be constantly re-calculating?
    [There is never a calculation, but always a re-calculation]

    Now therez a difference (a very subtle one tho') between Calculating and Thinking, a difference which I would NOT go into in detail as of now & as of here! For now, I *claim* this that : If you were somewhat like Nietzsche tho', your autobiography would have certainly had a chapter entitled, "How I Calculate So Well" with something like the contents of this post in it! Thinking however is of a different kind, something which is somewhat similar to Calculating but one which always already endangers itself, esp with its close encounter to an everlasting Aporia!

    And I guess your 3 points can be roughly (?) *generalized* as:
    1. Passion.
    2. Conviction.
    3. Empathy.

    Regards.


    PS. And I ask you: How can there be *another* God! lol!

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  2. For all the ranting, am clueless abt the title of yur post tho' !!!

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  3. erm. God(you), you rock, man! (i know this sentence is a contradiction) and I dont know, its damn funny... jani na keno? did you mean to write it this funny?

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  4. @ saptarshi:nice post. And like you've said,it's honest.

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