Fake what til you make what?

beachtable1009
I was at a talk once during my first year of college wherein Maryland Representative Elijah E. Cummings counseled young African Americans to “fake it til you make it!” (As an aside, I should mention that I have very positive feelings for Mr. Cummings, very positive.) I was confused and horrified. Despite my own faking and non-making, as an 18-year-old, the idea of faking was odious to me. I mean, I walked around with a ponytail, Docs and philosophy books in my own efforts at faking and making. But I was too stupid to realize it then. Faking it? On purpose? What? Where’s the necessary connection between acting one way and then becoming it?

Well, I’ve learned a lot since then. I’ve read Existentialism (Sartre, Nietzsche, et al) and Pragmatism and learned all about how our actions play on our conceptions, metal states, personalities, identities, etc. I also pulled my head out of my ass and realized that our personalities do not define our actions so much as the other way around. Even moods.  If you walk around bitching all day, you turn into a bitch.

In case you somehow missed it, I’m a moody man. Pessimistic. Nit-picky.  At times depressed.  In my defense, there are genetics (I don’t wanna talk about it) involved in depression and general gloom and resentment to a world that continually fucks us all over (don’t kid yourself).

But it’s also part of what has become my “image.”  I’m critical.  I have an opinion on everything, usually negative.  You know, people are more likely to think you’re smart if you act like that than if you think everything’s awesome.  Anyone can do that, right?  And if you’re insecure and arrogant (you can be both), you just about need everyone to think you’re smart and good and valuable and fun to be around  because the — at times — incredibly crushing things you say about people, products and situations tell people that you are witty and funny.

It also makes you a pain in the ass, as my wife reminds me.

With a little one on the way in six months, I think I’d like to learn to be more optimistic or, at least, less doomy and gloomy and hateful.  I thought about it, and in some essentialist bullshit decided that it’s not in me.  My blood comes from four grandparents.  One was depressed and, well, lost it, but was otherwise by all counts a sweet person.  (I don’t wanna talk about it.)  One was a terrible father to my father and the biggest example of a P-word I’ve ever met.  One turned out to be an evil bitch.  One I never met but never heard anything bad about.  My parents are very good people, but they each had one piece of shit to match their good parent, and my father’s mother died when he was nine.  Any sunny outlook on their parts came from sheer will.  So I should be able to do likewise, no?

How?  Faking it?  Maybe that’s bad terminology.  Acting like the world doesn’t disgust me is probably more than faking.  I mean, if we look hard enough, there are enough good things in the univserse that we don’t have to fake not wishing existence itself would cease, right?  Whenever I see the ultrasound image of my child, I can’t be mad or upset about anything.  I’m all smiles and giggles (yes, giggles, at work and  on the bus), and I want to buy everyone a coffee and give them free hugs.  So maybe it’s not faking it.  It’s in selecting what to judge the world by.

2 Responses to “Fake what til you make what?”

  1. daniel says:

    Maybe “faking it” isnt the best choice of words.
    However, if you have the same type of personality, as I do, it is easy to ,as you say, become a major “pain-in-the A**”, constantly bitching up a storm. And this kind of a mindset can lead to depression, and the problems.
    As you know, in my case, I have been fighting cancer and related problems health issues for the past 12 years now. My academic and career goals have gone to hell,and looks like I will have to grow old, sentenced to a life of abject poverty,and failure.

    So, I have decided to accept my fate,and just “fake it”. I.E., Ihave decided to change my outlook in life,and I keep reminding myself to not fall back in patterns of negative thinking. In teh past 6 months or so that I having working on this, I have becoem a far less depressed, person.
    One book that has helped immensly is titled, “The Mindful way through depression:freeing yourself from chronic unhappiness”, by Mark Williams, John Teasdale, Zindel Seagal, and Jon Kabat-Zinn.

    Check it out. and “fake it”, brother -man!!! :):)

  2. Steven says:

    “You survived 8 years of GWB, you can do anything!” said the midwestern conservative tongue-in-cheek. :)

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