The Three Things worth Doing in Life

by Ben Atlas on 08.8.2009.9:21am · 5 comments

Diploma Work given by Sir Frank Brangwyn, The Market Stall, 1919

Royal Academy Diploma Work given by Sir Frank Brangwyn, The Market Stall, 1919

Hugh MacLeod tweeted yesterday: “Three things worth doing in life: Breeding, loving and learning. Everything else is filler…” I will take this aphorism for a spin.

  1. Breeding – Offspring and fertility. A woman’s life long obsession with being attractive, the confidence of being able to arouse a man. A man’s sense of self worth depending on his ability to meet the challenge.
  2. Loving – the intoxication and the yearning. The “loving” is never complete if unrequited. “Speed” Levitch said it must be reciprocal. Love is about being loved, about validation of what you are. Loving includes being respected, the accolades and appreciation. If you love a man or a god and they don’t love you back, you can’t put a check mark here.
  3. Learning – Trying to understand your place in the universe, an opportunity to satisfy the natural thirst, an opening to quench the curiosity. The desire to travel and see the world. By no means is this a textual manipulation.

I have never met a person who had all three in the bag. If you imagine the world as a puzzle and the goal of the game to line up all three, the jackpot is theoretical. The vast majority of people manage only one of the three life essentials. There are a small number of the lucky bastards who lined up two of those. But the fascinating human condition is that even if a single goal is at bay out of the three, humans are in a state of constant agony, like a chronic plain, the realization that a defining component of life is missing. They constantly think about it and if you are a friend you have the privilege of always hearing about it. Perhaps the wisdom is the recognition of the bargain, and if you managed to score two of the three, acceptance of your luck. Just like at the end of his remarkable speech Alain de Botton says that “every vision of success has to admit what it is loosing out on”.

When people say “money is not important” they mean it isn’t amongst the three essential goals of life but no one ever argued that money indeed can facilitate all three. Or on a more nuanced level the traditional “bazaar” is treated in the Middle Eastern cultures as an elaborate ruse to cover up the transactions in the intangibles, the ritual of pretending to trade in physical objects. Pay respect to haggling, a breeding dance with love and knowledge.

P.S. I was thinking where creativity fits into the scheme. I have to say that creativity is a part of learning. People dance, paint, write code, do scientific research, play ball, all in order to think. These are the rosary beads of learning. As McLuhan said an artist confronts “present as his material because it is the area of challenge to the whole sensory life.” This is the process of learning and occasionally there is a byproduct, a breakthrough of discovery.

Image licensed courtesy of Picture Library of the Royal Academy of Arts

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 mertz 08.24.2009.10:27pm at 10:27 pm

i have to say this is well written and i agree. i'm not lucky enough but i fall into the learning portion (as long as i keep encouraging myself to learn about everything), and maybe less than .01% of the love criteria. i also agree with the marshall mcluhan comment. we study mostly media and marshall, but he had some great things to say about innovation, ingenuity, creation, creativity, etc.

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2 LDGourmet 08.24.2009.10:29pm at 10:29 pm

“Breeding?” Oy. If we take care of loving and learning that's enough. We have bred the world into a state of overpopulation. There are plenty of fellow citizens here already that can use our love. Learning can help us rise above that “goal.”

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3 mertz 08.24.2009.10:43pm at 10:43 pm

you know although i said i'm not lucky enough in referance to the breeding criteria…i've always learned that it is man's duty (men and women) to breed and continue the cycle because that's why humans were created. i know i haven't experienced breeding yet so maybe i don't have a full understanding of it's beauty, but i kind of think it's sad to teach kids that life is about breeding, and that the only reason god created people was to continue the human race. spread forth and multiply. this is being taught in churches and catholic schools.

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4 Ben Atlas 08.25.2009.3:41am at 3:41 am

Oh, completely forgot about 'overpopulation', thanks.

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5 Ben Atlas 08.25.2009.3:43am at 3:43 am

none of these things could be “taught”, these are all supreme mysteries that one has to discover.

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