"One drawback in belonging to a race of storytellers is a tendency to forget that life isn't a story, however great the need to perceive it as one. And one of life's chiefest failings, from a storytelling perspective, is that life lacks closure."
"Closure in what sense?"
"Closure in the sense of narrative convergence, all the elements coming together, loose ends tying off neatly after a final climax. Real life is never that tidy, and it doesn't stop happening just because someone's won a victory. Where the endpaper would come in a novel, actual events are followed by more actual events."
--Matt Ruff, Sewer, Gas, and Electric: The Public Works Trilogy
Not an original thought, I'm sure, and I'm pretty sure that I've even inflicted it on my friends before (although not on LJ, as far as I can tell :> ). But worth observing . . . especially for the sake of those (occasionally me) who sometimes say, or think, "As soon as I finish school/get the kids out of the house/get out of debt/get married/etc., then my life will really start." It doesn't, of course; it just starts another chapter . . . and thinking in those terms can cause one to treat the time until the end of the chapter as something to be gotten through as quickly as possible, rather than something to be appreciated for its own sake. (Besides, those that try to insist that the universe provide or respect narrative closure are bound to be continually, or at least periodically, frustrated.)
"Closure in what sense?"
"Closure in the sense of narrative convergence, all the elements coming together, loose ends tying off neatly after a final climax. Real life is never that tidy, and it doesn't stop happening just because someone's won a victory. Where the endpaper would come in a novel, actual events are followed by more actual events."
--Matt Ruff, Sewer, Gas, and Electric: The Public Works Trilogy
Not an original thought, I'm sure, and I'm pretty sure that I've even inflicted it on my friends before (although not on LJ, as far as I can tell :> ). But worth observing . . . especially for the sake of those (occasionally me) who sometimes say, or think, "As soon as I finish school/get the kids out of the house/get out of debt/get married/etc., then my life will really start." It doesn't, of course; it just starts another chapter . . . and thinking in those terms can cause one to treat the time until the end of the chapter as something to be gotten through as quickly as possible, rather than something to be appreciated for its own sake. (Besides, those that try to insist that the universe provide or respect narrative closure are bound to be continually, or at least periodically, frustrated.)
yes yes yes
Date: 5 March 2005 20:56 (UTC)No, not an original thought, but a valuable one nevertheless.
Re: yes yes yes
Date: 5 March 2005 21:48 (UTC)Part of the reason why the Archipelago dropped off my personal radar was that while I had a lot to say, it wasn't really obvious how to say most of it in the context of my personal "island". The blog form lends itself much better to the random expository essay on subject X, and that's a lot of what I realized I wanted to say/do with my island. That said, there may still be some interesting explorations to do with shared universes and such, but that's more likely to happen when I can discuss some of the possibilities in person.
Re: Re: yes yes yes
Date: 6 March 2005 13:54 (UTC)Re: yes yes yes
Date: 16 March 2005 02:06 (UTC)Yeah, I think there is some truth to that. But also, my island is indeed intended to capture pieces of the real me; I just don't mind if later I discover they have expired. They were true once, and thus may belong in the museum.