In the 40 years of my adult life so far, the amount and cost
of consumer goods and living expenses has accelerated at an exponential
rate. And I know that I cannot be
the only one who feels she has been on a giant hamster wheel all this time,
running at top speed and getting nowhere.
It is true that we have an “embarrassment of riches” in this country. I own a house and a car (well, as long as I keep making the
monthly payments). My house is an electronic playground that includes several
computers and a large television. My smart phone is my constant companion, and
I am entertained by an assortment of music players, eBook readers and digital
cameras. In many ways, I am living in the bright, shiny future portrayed at the
1963 World’s Fair. Yet, not too far from my front door chronically jobless
people are hanging out on a corner, there are transient homeless people in the
woods that border my town, and the abuse of drugs and alcohol continues to
destroy lives right in my neighborhood. To complain that, at 58 years old, I am
still living paycheck to paycheck does pale in comparison, and I cannot even
comprehend the more horrendous conditions in other parts of the world. But aren’t there big, important people
who deal with that? Great minds focused on improving life for all? More often,
it seems that those in powerful positions are fighting with each other like,
Godzilla and Mothra, and we are the tiny people on the streets of Tokyo, trying
our best to not get stepped on.
My children are grown, and having children of their own.
They are embarking on their own years of adulthood. I wonder, after 40 years, will they look back, wondering
where the time and money went and worrying about the next 40 years. Will they
have broken out of the hamster wheel existence or just traded it in to become
drones in a giant hive of worker bees?
Yes, it sounds like doom and gloom, and we can give in to
that. We can, and will, bemoan the
fact that life is difficult, plans don’t always work, bad things happen on a
daily basis and the money is never enough. It is therefore, incongruous to see people smiling, to hear
them laughing, to watch them dancing and generally acting happy. Or is it?
Look at it this way. That hamster wheel is the only one you
are going to get. You can paint it black and let it squeak until the noise
drives you insane. Or, you can decorate it with shining moments of your life,
open it up to family and friends, and laugh in the face of its unproductive
movement. You can run on and on, waiting for happiness to fall down on you from
the sky, or you can actively seek and create happiness. You may have to start
off by fooling your brain by acting happy before you actually feel it. You may
have to smile even though you don’t feel like it. You may even have to find
some other people to help you wrench that happiness back up from the hole it
has fallen in, but do it. The
future generation of worker bees is depending on you to show them the way.
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