The Metamodern Muse
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Mythical Creature of My Own Creation Living a Life of Reverie and Revolt.
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An Introduction
True of all humans, is that we indulge in consciousness at the crest of human progress. Peering out from the summit of modernity, it’s a brilliant view, but gazing beyond the horizon, squinting just so to see past the shine of progress, you can sight a murky storm cell of ignorance. From this vantage, it’s seen that no recent wisdom, or past enlightenment has allowed us to escape the duality of our nature. Shift perspective from looking forward, to looking back at where humanity has climbed up from, and it’s clear there will never be a new day for us. We will scale the same mountain, tame the same sky, and weather the same storm as each new generation asks itself what it means to be human, then merely copes with the answers.
The thing of it is, our visceral reality unfolds, not on a metaphorical mountaintop, but in mundanity. For me, it is second to last on a dead-end street, in a nice house, with a nice husband, and a nice cat. On any given day, my most poignant observation could be that the cat’s full coat gives her hind legs what looks to be tiny, white bloomers, and I might ruminate on that for about half a day. I may then borrow time intermittently, between chores, just to meditate on the serenity of her sunbathing. Now and again I’ll even engage her in a dialog for my own sake. Then, by the time head hits pillow, my whole day will have passed without paying any mind to the pressing anguish of humanity’s perpetual missteps in an absurd world. Other days, I obsess over it.
On each day in between, I fail to figure out just what responsibilities an awareness of humanity’s cyclical failures demand of a person who is no less fallible herself. What was I, a woman with no power or platform, supposed to do in an era ravaged by rampant consumption and threatened by tyranny? Questing for that answer, I have gone down many paths: I’ve been a would-be activist, would-be philanthropist, and a would-be revolutionary. At the point I retreated, I was overwhelmed with a feeling of futility, one that swaddled me in Netflix and the effortless passage of time. Then, a casual review of my bookshelf offered me as much of an answer as I could ever expect to find.
It wasn’t even in Jean-Paul Sartre’s actual essay, Existentialism is a Humanism, but rather just an excerpt from a lesser known work in the preface. On editing his publication, Les Temps Modernes, Sartre explained “We are siding with those who want to change both the social condition of mankind and its concept of itself.” Shuddering a little from its squeaking, I dragged my highlighter across those words.