Hi everyone,
Thanks for your thoughtful responses to my brief talk. Here are some more thoughts based on your comments/questions:
Ami: "Who is Hildy,if you don't mind my asking?"
Hildy is my wife.
Sunblue: "However, I maintain that a person’s level of hopefulness can be directly tied to the reality of their life circumstances."
I think this is for the most part, true. But—1) There are people who have been through horrific experiences—terrible families (even narcissistic!), holocaust/genocide, crippling illnesses, who somehow remain hopeful and positive., and 2) in situations where there are identical twins raised apart, if one twin has experienced major depression, the odds are 50% that the other has too. The simplest explanation for these findings is that there is a biological factor in happiness/hopefulness that plays a significant role in how we process our experience of the world.
Bean: " thank you for sharing that (the essay). I wonder if this resonates with many? it seems such an unpopular concept, to give up hope"
If you are lucky enough to have had positive life experiences, and the biology of hope, it probably won’t resonate at all. If you’ve had one, but not the other, maybe it will resonate a little!
Bella: "How do you define `hope' personally, Richard? I get the sense that what you are referring to , by my frame of reference, is perhaps `blind faith' or `unrealistic expectations'? But I'd like to hear what you mean from you, if you'd care to explain it."
I define hope as a pleasing feeling of optimism that something I wish for will happen in the future. I think there is a wide continuum of unrealistic to realistic hopes, and everyone has their own personal measure of this. I’m referring to my own personal measure, which is pretty stringent—e.g. the reason I’m hopeful that one of my plays will be accepted this years is that the Artistic Director wrote me that a play I submitted was one of her favorites—but the judges thought it was too long. So, I’ve cut it down.
Bella again: "setting realistic expectations, visualizing my hopes, and working towards them with a positive attitude."
I think this is great! Congratulations on the business and your pending marriage!
CB123: "The hopefulness that I have about life seems to be a kind of background noise that I can't make go away. It seems to be as much a part of who I am as is the suspicion that drives someone else."
Hmmm…a touch of lucky biology here?!!! Again, I think shared by most people…e.g. see teartracks' last post.
Gratitude28: "I am making her wait until she is 8 before she gets a permanent tattoo."
I’m wondering with Lighter: this is humor right?!!! Actually, my wife and a number of other women our age kind of like my daughter’s tattoo. Could this be a father thing?
Teartracks: I'm wondering if Nietzsche had voice? He certainly was and is heard even now through his writing, but was that equal to having voice as we understand it here? Was he an optimist or a pessimist? Are one's written words equivalent to their spoken word with both translating as voice.
Good questions. Here’s the wikipedia link:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_NietzscheBest to everyone,
Richard