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  • Without us perhaps quite noticing, much of what we place our hopes in will be ready for

  • us in a very a long time indeed, in months or even decades from now (if ever): the successful

  • completion of a novel, a sufficient sum of money to buy a house or begin a new career,

  • the discovery of a suitable partner, a move to another country. In the list of our most

  • intensely-felt hopes, few entries stand to come to fruition this season or next, let

  • alone by tonight.

  • But occasionally, life places us in a situation where our normal long-range hopeful way of

  • thinking grows impossible. Youve had a car accident; a very bad one. For weeks, it

  • seemed like you might not make it at all, now youre out of a coma and back home,

  • but you still have multiple broken bones, serious bruises and constant migraines. It’s

  • unclear from here when youll be going back to work - or whether you ever will. When someone

  • asks how things are, one answer seem to fit above all: were taking it one day at a

  • time.

  • Or imagine that a person is 89, mentally agile but very slow on their feet and often in pain.

  • They had a fall last month and their left knee is badly arthritic. Yesterday they did

  • some gardening. Today they may go to the shops for the first time in a while. You ask their

  • carer how they are: were taking it one day at a time.

  • Or youre a new parent. It was a very difficult birth, the baby had jaundice and required

  • a blood transfusion - and now, finally, mother and child are home. The baby cries a lot in

  • the night and has to take some medicines that aggravate the stomach, but last night was

  • good enough and hopefully today, if the weather holds, there’s a chance of taking a trip

  • to the park, to see the daffodils. How is it all going? Were taking it one day at

  • a time.

  • These may be extreme scenarios and a natural impulse is to hope that we will never encounter

  • them - but they contain valuable teachings for anyone with a tendency to ignore their

  • own advantages, that is, for all of us. One-day-at-a-time-thinking reminds us that, in many cases, our greatest

  • enemy is that otherwise critical nectar: hope and the perplexing emotion it tends to bring

  • with it, impatience. By limiting our horizons to tonight, we are girding ourselves for the

  • long haul and remembering that an improvement may best be achieved when we manage not to

  • await it too ardently. Our most productive mood may be a quiet melancholy, with which

  • we can ward off the temptations of rage or mania and fully imbibe the moderate steadfastness

  • required to do fiddly things: write a book, bring up a child, repair a marriage or work

  • through a mental breakdown.

  • Taking it day by day means reducing the degree of control we expect to be able to bring to

  • bear on the uncertain future. It means recognising that we have no serious capacity to exercise

  • our will on a span of years and should not therefore disdain a chance to secure or one

  • or two minor wins in the hours ahead of us. We should - from a new perspective - count

  • ourselves immensely grateful if, by nightfall, there have been no further arguments and no

  • more seizures, if the rain has let off and we have found one or two interesting pages

  • to read.

  • As life as a whole grows more complicated, we can remember to unclench and smile a little

  • along the way, rather than jealously husbanding our reserves of joy for a finale somewhere

  • in the nebulous distance. Given the scale of what we are up against, knowing that perfection

  • may never occur, and that far worse may be coming our way, we can stoop to accept with

  • fresh gratitude a few of the minor gifts that are already within our grasp.

  • We might look with fresh energy at a cloud, a duck, a butterfly or a flower. At twenty-two,

  • we might scoff at the suggestion - for there seem so many larger, grander things to hope

  • for than these evanescent manifestations of nature: romantic love, career fulfillment

  • or political change. But with time, almost all one’s more revolutionary aspirations

  • tend to take a hit, perhaps a very large one. One encounters some of the intractable problems

  • of intimate relationships. One suffers the gap between one’s professional hopes and

  • the available realities. One has a chance to observe how slowly and fitfully the world

  • ever alters in a positive direction. One is fully inducted to the extent of human wickedness

  • and folly - and to one’s own eccentricity, selfishness and madness. And so natural beauty

  • may take on a different hue; no longer a petty distraction from a mighty destiny, no longer

  • an insult to ambition, but a genuine pleasure amidst a litany of troubles, an invitation

  • to bracket anxieties and keep self-criticism at bay, a small resting place for hope in

  • a sea of disappointment; a proper consolation - for which one is finally ready, on an afternoon

  • walk, to be appropriately grateful.

  • Vincent Van Gogh was admitted to the Saint-Paul mental asylum in Saint-Remy in southern France

  • in May of 1889, having lost his mind and tried to sever his ear. At the start of his stay,

  • he mostly lay in bed in the dark. After a few months, he grew a little stronger and

  • was able to go out into the garden. And it was here that he noticed, in a legendary act

  • of concentrated aesthetic absorption, the gnarled roots of a southern pine, the blossom

  • on an apple tree, a caterpillar on its way across a leaf and - most famously - the bloom

  • of a succession of purple irises. In his hands these became like the totemic symbols of a

  • new religion oriented towards a celebration of the transcendent beauty of the everyday.

  • Vincent Van Gogh, Still Life: Vase with Irises Against a Yellow Background May 1890

  • His Vase with Irises is no sentimental study of a common flower: it is the work of a pivotal

  • figure in Western culture struggling to make it to the end of the day without doing himself

  • in - and clinging on, very tightly indeed, with the hands of a genius, to a reason to

  • live.

  • It’s normal enough to hold out for all that we want. Why would we celebrate hobbling,

  • when we wish to run? Why accept friendship, when we crave passion? But if we reach the

  • end of the day and no one has died, no further limbs have broken, a few lines have been written

  • and one or two encouraging and pleasant things have been said, then that is already an achievement

  • worthy of a place at the altar of sanity. How natural and tempting to put one’s faith

  • in the bountifulness of the years, but how much wiser it might be be to bring all one’s

  • faculties of appreciation and love to bear on that most modest and most easily-dismissed

  • of increments: the day already in hand.

  • The School of Life is coming to New York from the 4th to the 6th of October for a three-day conference

  • where you'll have the chance to meet other like-minded individuals and embark on a journey of genuine self-discovery and self-transformation. We hope to see you there.

Without us perhaps quite noticing, much of what we place our hopes in will be ready for

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一日一日を大切に (Taking It One Day at a Time)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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