Thinking Out Loud
You can see that I am not keeping up with this blog as regularly as I would like to. Certainly, it's related to my day/night job. The truth be known...I spend far too many hours in front of this screen. So why the need for another blog? I have yet to figure out the answer to that. Perhaps it is that I enjoy "watching" me speak... lol doubtful, but it's an answer of sorts.
Today I want to discuss optimism. I think it should be an infectious disease that spreads among us all, especially during difficult times like today with our crazy economy. One of my favorite quotes by Lewis Carroll is, "Sometimes I've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast." There is something very empowering about believing in the impossible. Don Quixote's big quest to dream...to follow that star... Quixote is the hero of
Don Quixote, the early 17th century novel by Miguel de Cervantes. Quixote is a dreamer and a kindhearted buffoon, an aging gentleman who sets out from his village of La Mancha to perform acts of chivalry in the name of his grand love Dulcinea. He rides a decrepit horse, Rocinante (which is quite comical), and is accompanied by his "squire," the peasant Sancho Panza. Quixote's imagination often gets the better of him (hmmm... perhaps he should have been a writer); in once famous incident he tilts at windmills, imagining them to be giants (perhaps the aftermath of late night pizza...I'm just sayin'). Throughout his many adventures Quixote often seems ridiculous, yet he maintains his staunchly hopeful attitude and belief in chivalry. (The term
quixotic now describes anyone who takes on an idealistic or foolish quest against great odds.) The book
Don Quixote inspired the 1959 play
Man of La Mancha, in which Quixote's quest is summed up in the song "The Impossible Dream."
As I was saying...
I realize that Don Quixote's character is a bit overdone, and certainly he would be considered rather odd in today's society. Especially since he was ever-so committed to winning the love of Dulcinea by performing wild acts of chivalry (it's all so very dramatic). Chivalry in some respects is a beautiful notion, and a code of behavior that medieval knights followed. Chivalry was a feature of the High and later Middle Ages in Western Europe. While its roots stretch back to the 9th and 10th centuries, the system of chivalry flourished most vigorously in the 12th and 13th centuries before deteriorating at the end of the Middle Ages. However, the ideals of chivalry continued to influence models of behavior for gentlemen and the nobility during the Renaissance in the 16th century. During the crusades, Christianity also influenced chivalry, but I really did not want this to become a history lesson... or did I? lol
A couple of informative websites to check out about chivalry are:
http://www.astro.umd.edu/~marshall/chivalry.html
http://www.chronique.com/Library/Chivalry/code.htm
Back to the subject at hand...
Optimism...
It is a medically proven fact, that optimism has profound affects on health. Your mental outlook controls your emotions, which in turn affect your body.
I prefer to hope against hope, to dream large, to look at the glass half full instead of half empty. Do you remember the childhood book,
Pollyanna authored by Eleanor Hodgman Porter (1868-1920)? Disney later turned the book into a feature film. The New Hampshire author created this childhood classic in 1913, and Pollyanna has been a symbol for inspiration ever since.
Here is a TRUE CONFESSION. I actually watch
Pollyanna whenever I feel slighted, overwhelmed with a circumstance that life is dishing out, or I simply have the temptation to get negative. The message behind this story is powerful. This young girl was able to turn the mindsets of an entire town around because she chose to be optimistic and glad about whatever life handed her in the moment. She looked for the good in every circumstance.
"Although the personality and popularity of
Pollyanna eclipses the author even today, the message of the book was never intended to be "blind optimism". About the storybook, "
Pollyanna did not pretend that everything was sugar-coated goodness," her creator Mrs. Porter insisted, "instead
Pollyanna was positively determined to find the good in every situation."
For further reference see:
http://www.golittleton.com/eleanor_porter.php
...and those are my thoughts today...back to dreaming the "POSSIBLE" dream...
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