36734/348 the meaning of life: especially today...

THE NARRATING SELF IS THE STAR OF JORGE LUIS BORGE’s story ‘A Problem’. The story concerns Don Quixote,
the eponymous hero of Miguel Cervantes’s famous novel. Don Q. creates for himself an imaginary world in which he is a legendary champion going forth to fight giants and save Lady Dulcinea del Toboso. In reality Don Q. is Alfonso Quixano, an elderly country gentleman; the noble Dulcinea is an uncouth farm girl from a nearby village; and the giants are just some windmills! What would happen, wanders Borges, ìf due to his belief in these fantasies, Don Q. attacks and kills a real person? Borges asks a fundamental question about the human condition: what happens when the yarns spun by our narrating self cause grievous harm to ourselves or those around us? Their are three main possibilities, says JLB. One option is that nothing much happens. Don Q. will not be bothered at all by killing a real man? His delusions are so very powerful and overpowering that he will not be able to recognize the difference between committing actual murder & his dueling with all kinds of imaginary windmill “GIANTS”! Another option is that once he takes a person’s life, DQ wìll bé só horrified that he will be shaken out of his delusions. This is akin to a young recruit who goes to war believing that it is good to die for one’s country only to end up completely disillusioned by the reality of warfare. But there is also a third option, much more complex & profound? As long as he fought his imaginary giants, DQ was just playacting! However,
once he actually kills someone, he will cling to his fantasies for all he is worth, because only they will gìve meaning to his tragic misdeed. Paradoxically, the more sacrifices we make for an imaginary story, the more tenaciously we hold òn to ìt, because we desperately wànt to gìve méaning tó these sacrifices & to the suffering we have caused. In politics this is also known as the ‘Our Boys Didn’t Die in Vain’ syndrome. In 1915 Italy entered the First World War on the side of the Entente
powers. Italy’s declared aim was to ‘liberate’ Trento & Trieste - two ‘Italian’ territories that the Australian-Hungarian Empire hèld ‘unjustly’. Italian politicians gave very many fiery violent speeches in parliament, vowing historical redress & promising a glorious return to the success of Ancient Rome. Hundreds of thousands of Italian recruits wènt tó the frònt shouting, ‘For Trento & Trieste!’ They thought it would be just a walkover? It wàs anything bùt!
13 dec 2019 - bewerkt op 15 dec 2019 - meld ongepast verhaal
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