Who's driving?

There's a mystical element to life that is often difficult to grasp and nearly impossible to comprehend.

I'm not talking about ghosts or Voodoo. I'm referring to the potential "butterfly effect" of seemingly innocuous events, which can later reveal themselves as turning points and stepping stones. These "happenings" appear to some as random cosmic coincidence, and to others as predetermined fate, depending on interpretation.

If you know me well enough, you've probably heard me talk about this before. The coincidence/fate discussion is one of my favorites.

I think the choices you make end up defining you. But I'm not sure we're the ones writing the definitions.

If you examine the decisions that have brought you to your current state (from Point A to Point B), there is a good chance you had no idea what you were getting into when you were back at Point A.

In other words, most decisions are made blindly. Often, there is no way to assess the future ramifications of even trivial choices.

That's a somewhat unsettling thought. It means that ultimately, you are not in the driver's seat of your own car.

Or if you are driving, it's foggy and you can't see beyond 50 yards.

Do I have any concrete evidence to back this up? I do.

Exhibit A: choosing a university.
Do you go in state or out? Ivy League or Pac-10? Private or public?
When you decide where to go to school and what to study, it's impossible to tell where each path will lead. I picked Arizona State, but I would have loved to go to a school like UC-Berkeley. But who knows where that would have taken me? Maybe to my dream job at the Washington Post, or maybe just into debt with cumbersome student loans to pay for the $40,000/yr tuition.

Exhibit B: choosing a wife (or husband).
Ok, so I'm not married, and therefore not fully qualified to use this example. But in theory, picking a spouse is one of the most difficult decisions a person can make. And even if you find someone you think is perfect, or perfect for you, there is no telling where you'll end up. I'm not being pessimistic or negative. I'm just repeating a well known truism: Love is blind.

Exhibit C: deciding what to do tomorrow.
This is the scariest and most important example. It's something that comes at us everyday. Planning a schedule, being somewhere at a certain point in time. Go to the movies, or go to the bookstore? A seemingly harmless, insignificant choice, but, what if at the bookstore you meet your future spouse? What if at the movie theater you perform the heimlich on someone choking on popcorn? Anyone can identify these turning points, both big and small.

So what exactly is my point here?

Blessed are the flexible, for they shall not be bent out of shape.

You'll never be able to completely control your life. Just make the best of what you've got.

Full speed ahead.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is a fascinating topic for me also....crazy that we have never really debated this one like we have the important topics like "is fried ice cream really fried?" etc. The not knowing what the downstream effects of each decision might be, is one of things that makes life so interesting really. To me (but not all), it seems clear that events are not predetermined, but not quite as clear that all effect is random. I am a big believer in NOT agonizing over trying to determine what the cosmic "right" decision is but rather focus making decisions based on gut feel, infused with as much knowledge and logic as one can muster, and then working like a maniac to make that decision work in the greater scheme of life. Now for an important one, cold cereal or granola bar for breakfast?

Anonymous said...

Sometimes, I feel the fear of uncertainty stinging clear
And I can't help but ask myself how much I let the fear
Take the wheel and steer
It's driven me before
And it seems to have a vague, haunting mass appeal
But lately I'm beginning to find that I
Should be the one behind the wheel

Whatever tomorrow brings, I'll be there
With open arms and open eyes yeah

Whatever tomorrow brings, I'll be there
I'll be there

So if I decide to waiver my chance to be one of the hive
Will I choose water over wine and hold my own and drive?
It's driven me before
And it seems to be the way that everyone else gets around
But lately I'm beginning to find that
When I drive myself my light is found

Travis Butterfield said...

are you commenting on your own posts again, Parker? An Incubus song? Really? Ha ha ha.

Drew Porter said...

Parker I have all the answers, just call me. You've got my number.

Travis Butterfield said...

p.s. this post cracks me up.

Post a Comment