The Young and Idealistic
There is no people more sure about the answers to life than the young and idealistic.
You may have had the good fortune of bumping into one. They're in their 20's and they're at a stage of life where they know who they are and where they want to be.
They're intelligent and usually academically and/or professionally successful, determined and somewhat angry at how silly a place the world is. They hold in disdain people who have made mistakes or whom are corrupt or people who seem to be fully or partially confused.
They're self-confident (sometimes overtly so) and if left unchecked, it will lead to a myopic evaluation of life, laced with an untempered arrogance which tends to alienate them from others.
They have very little self-doubt and rarely indulge in self-reflection, over their mistakes and weaknesses. Some of them are just purely selfish, seeking out friends only when they have a need to be entertained.
Some of them have had enough experiences that have hurt them in the past and they build up high walls of cynicism and detachment to make sure that those mistakes are not repeated.
They've made up their minds about the world and the people in it and they're preparing themselves not to be what they perceive to be the next casualty or sell-out. They don't think that they'll ever compromise.
They know better and they've got principles - so they think they will never make the same mistakes. They're convinced that they will be better and that the world is a better place for them being in it.
They're convinced that their generation is THE generation that will make the most important changes that the country has ever experienced.
If you were once young and idealistic - you would recognize some of the above traits. You may see it in the mirror and sometimes, you may see it in your family and friends.
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Whenever I talk to young idealists nowadays, I wonder if I've ever sounded like one of them.
So full of energy, confidence and enthusiasm - so unlimited, unfazed and unstoppable in the corners of their own mind. So totally unaware of their own fallibility - so full of an unjustified sense of destiny, by virtue of being highly educated.
And they'll conclude that they did it all on merit and luck had nothing to do with it. They might even conclude that God is talking to them and therefore, how can they be wrong?
One of the simplest conclusions that young people can reach is to conclude that they're better, because they've never or hardly made any big mistakes. Not ones that are obvious to them, anyway.
If you've never made a big mistake, young fellow - good for you. But take my word for this - it does not mean that you're not capable of it.
It just means that you've not yet come to your big mistake - one that you can realize and accept. One that makes you eat humble pie and makes you realize that you're not all that special or great, despite all good intentions and idealism.
But no young idealist likes to be talked down to, because of their age and youth. And I know better, than to try to do so.
Sometimes, the best way to get people to learn is to LET them make their own mistakes. Let them come to their own conclusions, after they've made their own mistakes. Don't rush it - it will come to them, when it's meant to come to them.
It's not that idealism is a bad thing.
It's a very good thing - society would be much poorer in both quantity and quality - if history were absent of young idealists. The civilization of Man itself may not have survived without the ideologies that promote the best of ideals for Man and his society.
But ideals don't exist or live in a vacuum. Ideals, no matter how high or noble - has to live in a context of reality. Because it is within reality, that ideals has to prove its worthiness for constructive change and betterment.
Over time, we realize that the idealistic road is a lonely one. In reality, human beings tend to push each other to conform to the values it holds dear.
One day, you might abandon some of your ideals to get ahead in your career or to increase your wealth.
Or you feel that the damage is worth it, because happiness and success is something that you prize above all else. Or when you feel that it's more important to make a living, than to take a principled stand. Or when you close one eye and remain silent to the corruption of your friends, but still scream out when the same is done by strangers.
Or you might join a political party which operates in a context that you don't really believe in or which values you cannot identify with - because you've been convinced that it's the most pragmatic thing to do. Perhaps, there is comfort in numbers and acceptance by the majority.
Any honest young idealist (that has grown older) would admit to themselves that somewhere along the way - reality had made them compromise - at least, in some areas, if not all. They find they're much lesser, than the people they once thought they were.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating.
You only know how true you are to your ideals when it requires you to pay a price and you would still openly and willingly take a stand, regardless of the consequences and the high price paid for it.
But the realization that most young idealists will come to, is that they're human. And so are other people in this world. And that people falling short of their ideals, is not necessarily a moral crime - that's being human too.
Reality is what tempers our expectations from the spring well of idealism.
Sometimes, not everything you believe in will fit squarely into this world - but you have to realize that an imperfect fit is far better than not attempting to fit it, at all.
And if the young person is still an idealist 10 years after leaving formal education - then in all likelihood, he will realize what's sacred to him and what's not. What are the areas which he has conceded due to pragmatism, compromise and weakness and what are things that has and will continue to remain, inviolable.
Provided he's honest to himself, of course. Arrogance is a dark shadow that clouds many mirrors of self-reflection. It stands in the way of self-improvement - and therefore, yes, idealism too.
If you're completely happy with who you are without the slightest ounce of self-doubt and the occasional self-recrimination - it may mean that you've stagnated, as a person.
But at the end of the day - what's important is that the journey to idealism be continued. Learn to forgive yourself (and others) for falling short and making mistakes and keep on trying.
There can be no lessons without mistakes. The person who has not made (or lacks the self-honesty to acknowledge his own mistakes), is someone who has stopped learning.
He stunts his own journey towards his ideals, if he cannot accept the reality of mistakes, in himself or others. There is a reason why they say, that to forgive is divine.
At the end of the day - it's what you learn from living, that matters - it's not a zero-sum game, where there is absolutely, no latitude for errors.
Our ideals are meant to make us better people, not perfect people. Perfect people cannot possibly change the world, because they simply cannot comprehend mistakes or failures in life. How do you relate to people who have fallen, when you never have?
And perhaps, we can only become better people when we accept and forgive the mistakes and fallibility of Man (without becoming overtly rigid or cynical) and yet still carry on the torch for idealism, while being realistic as to the level of substantive change that we may see within our lifetime.
But don't tell the young idealist that.
There are very few stages in life when one feels so certain, so uncompromising, unique and invulnerable. Every young idealist should go through it and be given the time and space, to mature at their own pace. It's the best way to learn.
Furthermore, they probably won't believe you, if you told them anyway.
They'll just think that you're old, washed out and jaded and simply did not have the moral strength to remain true to your ideals and to remain above it all.
But one day, they will know better (and perhaps, be better)- on their own.
Because if you're perfect in your mind, there is definitely only one way for things to go from there - and that is down.
You may have had the good fortune of bumping into one. They're in their 20's and they're at a stage of life where they know who they are and where they want to be.
They're intelligent and usually academically and/or professionally successful, determined and somewhat angry at how silly a place the world is. They hold in disdain people who have made mistakes or whom are corrupt or people who seem to be fully or partially confused.
They're self-confident (sometimes overtly so) and if left unchecked, it will lead to a myopic evaluation of life, laced with an untempered arrogance which tends to alienate them from others.
They have very little self-doubt and rarely indulge in self-reflection, over their mistakes and weaknesses. Some of them are just purely selfish, seeking out friends only when they have a need to be entertained.
Some of them have had enough experiences that have hurt them in the past and they build up high walls of cynicism and detachment to make sure that those mistakes are not repeated.
They've made up their minds about the world and the people in it and they're preparing themselves not to be what they perceive to be the next casualty or sell-out. They don't think that they'll ever compromise.
They know better and they've got principles - so they think they will never make the same mistakes. They're convinced that they will be better and that the world is a better place for them being in it.
They're convinced that their generation is THE generation that will make the most important changes that the country has ever experienced.
If you were once young and idealistic - you would recognize some of the above traits. You may see it in the mirror and sometimes, you may see it in your family and friends.
****************************************
Whenever I talk to young idealists nowadays, I wonder if I've ever sounded like one of them.
So full of energy, confidence and enthusiasm - so unlimited, unfazed and unstoppable in the corners of their own mind. So totally unaware of their own fallibility - so full of an unjustified sense of destiny, by virtue of being highly educated.
And they'll conclude that they did it all on merit and luck had nothing to do with it. They might even conclude that God is talking to them and therefore, how can they be wrong?
One of the simplest conclusions that young people can reach is to conclude that they're better, because they've never or hardly made any big mistakes. Not ones that are obvious to them, anyway.
If you've never made a big mistake, young fellow - good for you. But take my word for this - it does not mean that you're not capable of it.
It just means that you've not yet come to your big mistake - one that you can realize and accept. One that makes you eat humble pie and makes you realize that you're not all that special or great, despite all good intentions and idealism.
But no young idealist likes to be talked down to, because of their age and youth. And I know better, than to try to do so.
Sometimes, the best way to get people to learn is to LET them make their own mistakes. Let them come to their own conclusions, after they've made their own mistakes. Don't rush it - it will come to them, when it's meant to come to them.
It's not that idealism is a bad thing.
It's a very good thing - society would be much poorer in both quantity and quality - if history were absent of young idealists. The civilization of Man itself may not have survived without the ideologies that promote the best of ideals for Man and his society.
But ideals don't exist or live in a vacuum. Ideals, no matter how high or noble - has to live in a context of reality. Because it is within reality, that ideals has to prove its worthiness for constructive change and betterment.
Over time, we realize that the idealistic road is a lonely one. In reality, human beings tend to push each other to conform to the values it holds dear.
One day, you might abandon some of your ideals to get ahead in your career or to increase your wealth.
Or you feel that the damage is worth it, because happiness and success is something that you prize above all else. Or when you feel that it's more important to make a living, than to take a principled stand. Or when you close one eye and remain silent to the corruption of your friends, but still scream out when the same is done by strangers.
Or you might join a political party which operates in a context that you don't really believe in or which values you cannot identify with - because you've been convinced that it's the most pragmatic thing to do. Perhaps, there is comfort in numbers and acceptance by the majority.
Any honest young idealist (that has grown older) would admit to themselves that somewhere along the way - reality had made them compromise - at least, in some areas, if not all. They find they're much lesser, than the people they once thought they were.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating.
You only know how true you are to your ideals when it requires you to pay a price and you would still openly and willingly take a stand, regardless of the consequences and the high price paid for it.
But the realization that most young idealists will come to, is that they're human. And so are other people in this world. And that people falling short of their ideals, is not necessarily a moral crime - that's being human too.
Reality is what tempers our expectations from the spring well of idealism.
Sometimes, not everything you believe in will fit squarely into this world - but you have to realize that an imperfect fit is far better than not attempting to fit it, at all.
And if the young person is still an idealist 10 years after leaving formal education - then in all likelihood, he will realize what's sacred to him and what's not. What are the areas which he has conceded due to pragmatism, compromise and weakness and what are things that has and will continue to remain, inviolable.
Provided he's honest to himself, of course. Arrogance is a dark shadow that clouds many mirrors of self-reflection. It stands in the way of self-improvement - and therefore, yes, idealism too.
If you're completely happy with who you are without the slightest ounce of self-doubt and the occasional self-recrimination - it may mean that you've stagnated, as a person.
But at the end of the day - what's important is that the journey to idealism be continued. Learn to forgive yourself (and others) for falling short and making mistakes and keep on trying.
There can be no lessons without mistakes. The person who has not made (or lacks the self-honesty to acknowledge his own mistakes), is someone who has stopped learning.
He stunts his own journey towards his ideals, if he cannot accept the reality of mistakes, in himself or others. There is a reason why they say, that to forgive is divine.
At the end of the day - it's what you learn from living, that matters - it's not a zero-sum game, where there is absolutely, no latitude for errors.
Our ideals are meant to make us better people, not perfect people. Perfect people cannot possibly change the world, because they simply cannot comprehend mistakes or failures in life. How do you relate to people who have fallen, when you never have?
And perhaps, we can only become better people when we accept and forgive the mistakes and fallibility of Man (without becoming overtly rigid or cynical) and yet still carry on the torch for idealism, while being realistic as to the level of substantive change that we may see within our lifetime.
But don't tell the young idealist that.
There are very few stages in life when one feels so certain, so uncompromising, unique and invulnerable. Every young idealist should go through it and be given the time and space, to mature at their own pace. It's the best way to learn.
Furthermore, they probably won't believe you, if you told them anyway.
They'll just think that you're old, washed out and jaded and simply did not have the moral strength to remain true to your ideals and to remain above it all.
But one day, they will know better (and perhaps, be better)- on their own.
Because if you're perfect in your mind, there is definitely only one way for things to go from there - and that is down.