Resolutions for a lifetime
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As I watched from my hotel room the fireworks over Central Park, I
was filled with that feeling that you get from looking at blank
pages, empty rooms and photos that came out black. It is that scared
tingle of possibility. The emotion that questions most everything
around us, that thing that makes us reason with our contemptible and
comfortable surroundings. I stood on that freezing terrace letting
the chilled wind brush up against my face thinking of a new year,
thinking of last New Year’s when I had no idea that my grandfather
would get sick, that a close friend would die or that I would start
writing this column.
After the fireworks had stopped illuminating the sky and the good
people of New York had stopped blowing horns and screaming, the party
settled down, and talk started about that cliche statement that must
be brought up. The word itself trivializes the true meaning of what
they are and how they can affect us. The “resolutions” that we make
are a classic and unrealistic tradition that never works. As I sat
thinking of mine, I thought of how no matter what I promised myself
that somehow I would not follow through. Everyone agreed with me that
almost every single resolution had been broken within the first few
days of the sacred promise. We are a civilization of talk, gossip and
promise. We all read tabloids, gossip and judge. Maybe it was the
opening of Pandora’s box or an instinct that lies within all of us.
We all talk about how we want to go to the gym, how we want to be
kinder, not cuss, take a trip to Italy, or just to be a better
person. What ever it may be, these little tokens of our faith in our
own self is somewhat always broken. Why can’t we get our act
together? Is it that we have no faith in our own stamina, that our
confidence is just a facade we apply in public?
Commitment is this scary word that seems to bring on so many
negative connotations. Commitment to our resolutions, to our wives
and family, to our job, and to ourselves, all of these things bring
to mind a small box with the walls closing in. Why do I, and almost
everyone, shirk away from the obligation of life? Am I flake, are we
all flakes in modest ways? Some don’t do things because it doesn’t
help them, but even if it is for our own benefit, we avoid it at all
costs. It is hard to go to the gym. It is hard to stop eating
Snickers, and it is really hard to be nice to the world, but in life
if things weren’t hard then every guy would have a ton of money,
every girl would fill out those tops, and everyone would look like a
model. But, life isn’t fair and to achieve these goals it takes
serious dedication that most people aren’t willing to have.
Someone once asked me what was wrong with my generation. I had no
idea. It is hard to name something that you are a part of, so
embedded in it, that you realize you are the stereotypical
protagonist of the problem. My generation -- the generation born of
the young phase of parents who insisted on calling us by stupid names
that came from books. Our mothers were all young and beautiful, and
our fathers affluent. We were a generation born to luxury, where home
computers and where easy access reigned. We are born without a cause.
We have no war, not yet, to fight, no great ambition, because most of
us have been handed our fate the moment we are conceived, we are born
unto this world as adults. Some are ignored by parents and given
nannies to watch over them. We realize that our parents are human,
stumbling along in this world just like everyone else, and we are no
better or no worse.
I had no idea what last year was supposed to hold for me, but as I
look back on it maybe these New Year’s resolutions are not chosen
with a hand filled with a champagne fluke of an air filled with fire,
but maybe life chooses our changes. In life there is no such thing as
a constant -- we all change every day. That is what makes it
interesting. It is never safe, quiet, or peaceful, or terrible or
scary, it is just unpredictable.
I realized we are just like the city of New York, we are
constantly buzzing, and when we are wounded the only thing we can do
is get back up and keep on fighting, and be better than ever. This
can be frightening and exhilarating depending on the position you are
in. We are molded and shaped into a new form of clay, but we are
always essentially clay. Maybe the resolutions that we should make
are to let life shape us, to be open to the possibility of tomorrow.
Not to make one night a year about resolution, but every day.
* MICHAEL A. WALEK is a Sage Hill School sophomore whose columns
will appear occasionally in the Forum section.
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