'I don’t want a good career'
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Until I got tired. I began to
question the things that I religiously believed before. I began to be aware of
my weakness and limitation. I was shockingly exposed to the brutishness of
life. Nothing made sense, and I got tired of dreaming big. In other words, I
have become disinterested. Like someone who is forced to watch a movie a third
time around, almost memorizing its every scene and conversation, effortlessly
knowing what event follows from the previous one and what leads to another one,
life for me has become so boring that it made me want to sleep always –
literally. I stopped running. Instead, I spent most of my time lying lazy,
eating, internet, wondering why people still do what they do. Armed with my
philosophical eyesight, I began to realize that somehow, everything that we
have always wanted for ourselves are not really heavenly eternal goals set for
us by destiny or time. All of it, we have made it up.
Some of us wanted to get
promoted to the highest possible position, many want to earn more and more,
many others want to get famous for things they are best at, and there are few
who naively dream to become like the personas they see in the television. But
all of these are essence-less, they do not have a nature, they are a social-construct.
We construct them so that we can feed our ego, hide our insecurity, and
decorate our pride. We look at our worth in comparison to the achievements of
other people. Somehow, whether consciously or not, we have created a giant
weighing scale, and all of us are in it. Like Solomon of the Old Testament, I
declare life’s vanity!
This, perhaps, is the reason why
I no longer have the same enthusiasm like I did before concerning my career.
Well, it may be that I am just insecure and that I only say this because I have
already been outrun by others. But I know insecurity; I used to live it. I know
for certain that I am not insecure. In fact, so far by now I am most secured.
Disinterested, yet contented, practical and realistic, but overwhelmed by
ideas, placed in a dim spot but enlightened inside. I know for sure that I
cannot continue to live my life the way I did. I don’t want to run to outrun. I
am tired of all these nonsense. I don’t want the center stage, the spot light,
the presidential table, the microphone. In short, I don’t want a good career.
Somehow, I realize that to
pursue a good career is to install an unending chain of competition, greed, and
insecurity. If I join the race, and I am fast, people become insecure of me,
and if I am slow, I get envious of other people. My worth and others’ worth
would be determined by who among us gets first, and this is just terrible. I am
tired-to-the-point-of-hating the kind of life people endorse in the television,
successes people post on Facebook, achievements made up by the education system
to make students fear the numbers called grade. This economy of bragging and
envy is sick. So I’ll slow down and lay low. Get lazy. Get fat. Then soon, in
the margins where I won’t necessarily have to catch any attention, I’ll explore
my passion and follow it. I’ll imagine more. I’ll be a self that nobody cares,
neither the center of attention nor a magnet of jealousy. And I won’t have to
worry about this goddamn career.

The path you wish to tread (or may have already trodden) is a scary one. Not the type of 'scary' that you feel when you watch a horror movie, but the kind of scary one would feel if being left stranded in the middle of the ocean with only a piece of log to hold onto, barely keeping you afloat, and suddenly the log magically disappears leaving you flailing frantically to save yourself from drowning-- that kind of scary. It is easy to assume that once you decided to pull yourself out from the race, you will not be jealous of those ahead of you and those behind you will not envy you... but as promising the idea of the Miller of Dee is ("I envy nobody and nobody envies me"), there will be those who will be envious of the courage you've shown to not be a part of the 'race'-- specifically those who are still a part of it and wish to be freed... Getting ourselves free from this construct takes a lot of toll on us, just like how active cellular transport uses a lot of ATP-- going against the culture is not only tiresome but it could only take us so far.
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