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Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Doomed for Mediocrity

It seems that, over time, we, Americans, all turn out to become the same person. We, the average american schoolboy or girl, seem to slip down the ever-entrenching, ever-engulfing, and ever-slippery slope down to mediocrity. Society shoves us up the latter of, as they call it, "success" while in truth it's a latter of sameness and monotony, we doom ourselves by trying to please our family and friends.
As long as I can remember I've been told to get good grades, then I got told to take the ACT to swipe at scholarships, go to college, marry, and tell your kids to do the same. This is the latter that we all have seen plenty of times before, but what is at the top? A Toyota Camry? An average house? Generic Wal-Mart groceries? This is the life that we all end up with but is it the life that we want? Do we wanna put our feet in the exact footprints of our parents and theirs before them? We cannot take advice from this song as it claims, "I find sometimes its easy to be my self, sometimes I find its better to be somebody else". It is not better to be somebody else. Thats how we all end up the same, by trying to be each other.
The only way to escape mediocrity is to unmistakably be our own selves, without taking influence from others, and to make our lives truly our own.
If you wanna never marry, work at McDonalds, and try to become a famous musician, for the rest of your life do it. Who cares if society says your a loser you'll end up living more of an exciting free life then any of us.

1 comment:

  1. Several texts spring to mind as I read your post. Dan Pink's A Whole New Mind criticizes the single ACT brain thinking. Mark Twain's essay, "Corn-Pone Opinions" opines the paradox of originality. Chopin's The Awakening contemplates the struggle for individuality. You might find some or all of these interesting reading.

    Your ideas are moving and thought-provoking, yet totally breaking from society's mold is far from easy, which is why few are able to do it. Most succumb to the pressure of conformity.

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