Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Dinner between authors


In this world, life is all about how you perceive what you’ve been given. But no matter what, there are always only 2 options. Either you take it and go, and you make a living for yourself, or you mourn how crappy your life is and constantly ask, why me? When in reality the world is in fact NOT out to get you, I promise you that.

If by some off chance, Mr. Wallace and Ms. Morrison were seated at the same table on an evening out on the town, I believe that they would have much to discuss on their views of how they perceive the world.

The speech that stood out to me this most was Mr. Wallace’s This is Water. Multiple times he references the “default-setting,” discussing how it is our first instinct to put ourselves in the center of the universe, making our problems more important than others and our needs having to be dealt with before anyone else’s. He then continues on to list examples of a normal default-setting mind frame throughout a typical day for the modern working person. As negativity continually piles up, he then begins to show how a simple change of your mind frame can considerably improve your day.

Now the question is, how would Ms. Morrison respond? When the old woman is continually bantered with the question “Is the bird I am holding living or dead?” she finally replies that she doesn’t know, but that whether it is alive or not, that choice is in their hands, literally and theoretically. Flipped another way, language is essential to life. The way it is handled by the youth of today determines if it survives, but if one fails, so do we all.

Both authors would agree on the fact that your life is in fact in your own hands, and the way you live it is entirely up to you. No matter how terrible of a hand you were dealt, you can come back and make a living for yourself. Wallace would be more adamant on the fact that it is all up to you, while Morrison would see it as a domino effect that eventually lead to that person’s demise.

I have always been a firm believer that everything happens for a reason, and having faith in God’s greater plan will lead to a brighter future. As Mr. Wallace pointed out, it really is based on how you decide to look at things.

1 comment:

  1. I agree with your take on what the two speakers would have to say to each other, I also like how you call back to Morrison's "old woman" story. I felt that Morrison's speech was harsher and a bit more real. It seemed as if Wallace was giving guidance to young adults in his speech, while Morisson was giving her audience warning.

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