I believe in working to get over the next
hill: the struggle and the vista. There was painfully little to occupy a
hyperactive pre-teen in the rural Ohio, rust-belt, single-stoplight
argi-village where I grew up. In my early teens, time spent at the local
swimming pool was uncomfortably formative.
While my peers were growing pecs, I
was…well let's just say, "not". And while the coolly air-conditioned
library was equally formative, it was no place for an out-going, energetic
explorer to spend his summer.
I acquired a map of out county,
and with my compass, inscribed 5, 10, and 20 mile radii circles around our
village and set out on my 10-speed. I would eventually visit all the other
little dots on that map.
Almost every day of summer was spent, accompanied only
by my thoughts, the smell of field and livestock, the mid-July sun, and the
occasional truck or tractor. Straight as an arrow, mile after mile, up and
down, on and on to all the other little villages like mine. I'd ride around their
small town, look in their store, and get a slug of water at their
baseball diamond or their library. Then, I'd ride home and insert a
small colored pin into the map marking the goal I'd just accomplished: Attica,
Brokensword, Republic, Sycamore.
I believe life to be an
ever-expanding map full of hills to climb, roads to follow, and villages to
visit. The sun will often be on your back. You will sweat. You will work.
You'll often be alone. But, that's what's need to reach the next, small goal,
to see what the world looks like from the next vista Reading a classic novel is
a visa. Finishing the next household project is a vista. Leveling up is a
vista.
I believe that by going further
on your map in one direction or another, you become better than you were before
the journey began. To see more of the map is better than seeing less. Home is a
comfortable prison. However, I also feel the drive to get up the next
hill presses you. Without self-motivation, there's little anyone else can do
for you. And I must consider the ride home. Little is as sweet and satisfying
as coasting down a winding, steep hill with the wind in your hair, on the way
home. There are small rewards in life.
I believe
that with diligence and ardor you become your best, more authentic self, closer
to God, and closer to your neighbor. I believe with an ever-expanding map, you
gain an ever-expanding understanding of the universe and I think that's a
pretty good life's goal.
Point well taken, but---coincidence!---we're reading Kant this week, and he's famous for never having ventured too far from Koenigsberg in his entire life :) except in the figurative sense of travelling far in (into) his own mind, of course
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