She is the picture of happiness and fulfillment. She is
always positive and upbeat, regardless of the circumstances. She is happy when
she is in a relationship and happy to be out of a relationship.
She's not just happy: she's excited. In fact, she lives in a state of constant excitation. For her the glass is always full.
Her moods are so consistent, her emotions are so constant,
that she seems divorced from the reality of her life. One suspects that she has
been taking happiness pills.
The only saving grace is that she isn’t real. She’s a
caricature, cooked up by the writers at The Onion.
In their psychological portrait of fictional Ann Castlen the
writers provide us with a picture of a goal that young people have
been told they should attain.
The Onion describes her well:
Just
six months after claiming she was ecstatic about moving in with her boyfriend,
and a mere eight weeks after announcing that she "couldn't be
happier" with their decision to take a brief time apart, administrative
assistant Ann Castlen, 26, told friends Monday that she was absolutely thrilled
to be single.
"Free
at last!" Castlen said, nearly a year to the day after she informed
several coworkers that she was emotionally ready to settle down and have
children. "It's like this giant weight has been lifted off me and I can
finally breathe. I'm just going to enjoy this time alone and do all those
things I was dying to do when I was bogged down with [ex-boyfriend] Brandon
[Weiter]."
According
to friends, Castlen has expressed nearly identical feelings of elation upon
returning to the dating scene, entering the initial phase of monogamous
courtship, getting back together with an ex-boyfriend, developing a crush on a
coworker, going on a series of blind dates, trying an open relationship, trying
a long- distance relationship, and meeting a guy in a bar and having a passionate
fling that she doesn't expect to go anywhere.
Castlen’s attitude is so relentlessly optimistic that she is
devoid of human emotion.
The Onion sums it up:
Having
such an optimistic outlook on her love life is not uncommon for Castlen, who
since reaching dating age has undergone more than 23 changes in relationship
status, ranging from long-term abstinence to a brief but intense affair with a
married man. The 26-year-old has also celebrated three serious relationships
that lasted the perfect length of time, five just-what-she-needed dumpings, two
hookups with ex-boyfriends that "gave her closure," and an abruptly canceled
engagement that Castlen said she couldn't have planned better herself.
Read the article, now jealous that I missed all the self-esteem training that the young uns get. I was taught that horrible thing - responsibility!
ReplyDeleteIn satire there is wisdom. This proves that while the natural order is overriding, it can be temporarily circumvented by the human ego.
ReplyDeleteIt also confirms, as DeNihilist intimates, that the self-esteem without merit movement was the single greatest cause of corruption in our society.
Evolutionary principles are for humans. While the article of faith describing evolution as origin is for simian derivatives to use as a prop to knock humans on their heads.
While neither human nor simian derivative will escape this conflict unscathed, I wonder who will ultimately survive to tell another tale.