But then I got a new phone and I didn’t delete the app
quickly enough. Completely randomly and without any warning I started getting
notifications on my phone. “Look! Your friend is doing this cool thing without
you!” “Someone you barely know tagged you in a post suggesting you like their
selling page of stuff you don’t want!” “A bunch of women say if you like this
meme the world will be rid of breast cancer forever!”… whatever. And it just
got too hard to resist, and quickly the old Fakebook insecurities have crept
back into my life, along with all the existential angst and distanced inclusion that undoubtedly ensues.
Anyway, this morning, bleary eyed and in a powerless, semi-conscious
state, my phone made the standard pop noise. Someone I know had shared a story
about the not-Meryl-Streep-Meryl-Streep quote from about a year ago. In case
you have missed it (and I did at the time, maybe I can’t rely on internet
forums and Woman’s Hour to keep me up to date), this is about a quote that was
by Portugese life coach José Micard Teixeira, but has somehow been attributed
to Meryl Streep and has travelled the internet far and wide posing as words of
wisdom from the great actress. Loving Meryl Streep, or any nugget of wisdom
from older ladies who seem to have their shit together, I got sucked in to
begin with and could feel myself thinking yeah, right on! Then I read it again
and again and saw how miserable, selfish and hostile it actually was, full of
hypocrisy and cynicism. If I was Meryl Streep I would be pissed to have this “wisdom”
floating around in my name. I got so riled lying there in my usually cosy,
chilled, Facebook free area that it awoke the sleeping lion (named Cecil, in memory) that has been my need to write for the past few years, and spurned me to write this, the antithesis of
the not-Meryl-Streep-Meryl-Streep quote. I’m not going to quote
the original words here, you can google it and find it yourself if you so wish, this is simply my response. Enjoy…
“We all need to have patience. Not because we are
meek, yoghurt knitting hippies but because in order for our society to thrive
it must be based on community and understanding. I have reached a point in my
life where I realise that I have the power to choose what displeases me, and
the strength to deflect that which hurts me. I see cynicism, excessive criticism
and demands as issues of the beholder, none of my business. I choose to love without
expecting love in return and look for the good in everyone, even those who do
not like me. I have got to an age where I realise that I look younger when I’m
smiling and older when my face is twisted in a grimace, so I try to project a
sunny disposition for the sake of myself and those around me. I learned that
pretense, hypocrisy, dishonesty and cheap praise are sadly part of the
foundation of our world and that each of those things are borne of a different insecurity.
Pretense shows a lack of confidence, hypocrisy is generated by overwhelm,
dishonesty is usually an attempt at protection of self, and seeking and
revelling in cheap praise is a sign of low self-esteem. If people have knowledge,
I love them to share and revel in it and I enjoy other people’s ideas however
different they are to my own. Comparison is indeed the thief of joy but it is
also a source of inspiration. I believe in a world where there are a million
shades of grey and that’s why I accept those who are inflexible just as I
accept those who are pliant. I realise that loyalty and honesty must be earned
and that some of my friends are merely acquaintances that owe me nothing. Everyone
has busy lives and therefore may not realise that something they are saying or
doing directly affects me, so I try not to let it affect me. I understand that
those who do not know how to give a compliment or word of encouragement are
those most needing compliments and encouragement themselves. Exaggeration can
be a great source of humour and those who do not like animals have every right
to like or dislike anything they please. And on top of that, I have patience.
Without patience the world gets just a little more hostile, selfish and sad.
The world deserves our patience. “
- by Me, August 2015
Nice to see you back in the saddle xxx
ReplyDeleteNice to see you back in the saddle xxx
ReplyDeleteThank you :-) xxx
ReplyDelete