The inimitable Julie Burchill has taken to explaining the dangers that accompany
decadence. I am sure that you were all looking for a good reason to toss aside
your adolescent decadence. If you weren’t, Burchill will surely persuade you to
do so.
She begins by explaining that decadence has its time and its
place-- in adolescence. If you fail to put away childish things, as the apostle
called them, you will end up being boring. I am sure that you do not want to be
boring. What can be more boring than being boring.
Still, if you know when to get off, there’s nothing wrong
with youthful day-trips to Decadence. It’s one of those things, like love bites
and Maoism, which you can indulge in when young and pretty, but look rather sad
trying to sustain into middle age. Worst of all, it can make you profoundly
boring. Its 19th-century adherents went on to embrace everything from
Catholicism to anarchy. I started volunteering in a charity shop.
When you start out on the road to decadence you will feel
rebellious, or some such. But then, if you cling to your decadence, you will
become a lab rat, the kind that is used to study addictions. This happens after the pleasure ceases to be pleasurable.
Is that really so surprising, though? Not when you
consider that the same waywardness which leads lost souls to decadence will
eventually lead them out again — unless pleasure has destroyed them before they
get the chance to break free. Because while pleasure, whether induced by
pornography or cocaine, appears at first to open up a new world, hold it a beat
too long and it ends up shrinking that new realm until you become not a
Decadent but a lab rat, scurrying about in your own personal sewer searching
for the next lever to pull.
And then, Burchill explains, people who have too much
decadence lie about their behavior, casting themselves as cultural
revolutionaries. They are lying down in a stupor-- almost as though they were
lying on an analyst's couch-- claiming that they are embracing their
wickedness, or some such. It’s better than being too weak to overcome an
addiction.
A good point, I would say:
When this happens, people begin to ceaselessly lie to
themselves about their behaviour in order to continue it. And perhaps there’s a
psychological reason for this: being wicked is always going to seem a lot more
attractive than being weak. In every branch of the arts, for example, wicked
people are glamourised, whereas the weak are portrayed as deserving nothing but
contempt. This often leads to self-deception, as the Decadent insists that the
source of their chosen indulgence — be it drugs or porn — is magically free of
the misery and broken lives which litter its production.
She means to say that decadent pursuits have a price, in
broken lives and in human misery.
As always, Burchill’s musings are well worth our attention.
2 comments:
Orrrrr, NO LINK? Which is what I see. But then, I am waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay past my adolescence.
Stuart is going to be the first man to live past 150.
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