Sunday, September 11, 2005

In Praise of Bertrand Russell

I'm heading back to our Birmingham office tomorrow morning, after a mildly pleasant weekend in London. I can feel a bad mood coming on though, and I haven't yet worked out why. The last couple of months have been pretty damn good all in all:

- Work extended my contract until the end of November and gave me a little responsibility (which is why they're sending me alone to Birmingham this week). That means that - as long as I don't get sacked or the project doesn't get pulled, both of which could happen at any time given the ruthlessness of the industry and the fluidity of this project - I ought to be able to save enough to tide me over for an extended holiday/ unemployment period.

- After months of fruitless shopping ventures, I finally splashed out on new clothes and gave my old ones (some of which were over five years old) to charity. The catalyst for this was the chance acquisition of a book on ethical buying, which gave me a good excuse to reprioritise my hangups about the fashion industry, labels and clothes as a means of self-advertisement.

- I deliberately left this until third, but we all know it ought to be right up there at number one: women. I've hardly been the heart-breaker my family think I am, but it's amazing what attention from the opposite sex can do for a guy's mood (or the same sex, whatever waters your flowers). I basically had a fairly lengthy (for me) period in which I got involved/ had various encounters with a number of people, none of whom I considered as even possible candidates for the seemingly unattainable "A One" status (as opposed to The One, which I don't believe in), but who served a purpose and with whom I was (almost) entirely honest. I say almost because, in the full knowledge that I never wanted anything serious from them, and being careful for the most part not to play an active role in them thinking otherwise, I used the contrived, transparent "Let's just go back to yours. I won't have sex with you, but... [there's plenty of other fun things we can do]" line in order to try and have sex with them - the old foot in the door now-I'm-in-your-bed-and-I-can't-resist-you strategy. It didn't work (I think it stopped working around the age of 22), but I did end up having a surreptitious shag, in the parlance of our times, with a girl who required neither proposal nor pretense. She did however, rather comically, deem it necessary to neck what looked like a large whisky on arrival at her place. I'm still a little puzzled, but then she almost certainly had a funny taste in her mouth by that point as we'd found a little space of our own prior to going back - I apologise for the crude level of detail here, but sometimes I find it difficult to resist making inappropriate jokes. I wish I could remember what I did in fact say to her - all I can recall is her admiration for my seemingly abundant self-confidence. Alcohol: it gets you there, but nobody knows how. In my puzzlement at the whisky episode, I've entertained the thought that she didn't really want to have sex with me - given my sometimes unfortunate cognitive disposition, I've almost been convinced - but then a rational look at the entire situation seems to suggest that maybe she was just a little nervous: she said she didn't usually do this sort of thing (and, not without a sense of irony, I agreed), it was her who suggested doing anything more than just kissing, it was her who suggested I accompany her back to her place etc. Poor thing, and there's me, playing alpha male for the night... Maybe she had an alcohol problem? Maybe I just shouldn't question these things - we got back, she fancied a quick whisky, we screwed, I left. End of story.

- I've moved flats. As I said before, I'm now living in CM's old room. I didn't dislike where I was living before by any means, especially as I was right on the doorstep of three of my childhood friends, but now I'm in a bigger room and in a better location.

- My dad seems to be getting better. He suffers from bipolar disorder and his latest bout of ill health has been going on since April 2004. I doubt whether I'll pursue this theme on the blog though, I'll have to see...

Anyway, I guess things are calming down a little now and perhaps that's why I might be feeling the onset of a bad mood. It won't last. What I did want to say though was that while I'm in Birmingham this week I very much doubt I'll have time to blog, so I wanted to leave a link to an essay by Bertrand Russell - in my opinion one of the most important philosophers of the 20th century - called In Praise of Idleness. Read it if you have time - if you like it, I would recommend the eponymously titled book.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hi,
I found your blog by chance and read some parts of it... i like it. It´s funny how some worries and problems that people have, are the same, despite we can be in different countries (i´m from portugal). Maybe almost any 25 years old person, in an european coutrie would feel the same, í don´t know, but i guess that i could have written some of the things you have wrote...
I´m going to read "In praise of idleness" as soon as i have opportunity (time...).
Sorry for my lousy english, i understand it easily but i don´t writte it often, so here´s the result (the bad result), but i hope you can understand. Maybe if my english was better i could write more about all the thoughts that have come to my head when i was reading what you have wrote, but i feel a little bit limited by the language, it would be much easier to write in portuguese, but then you would understand even less than with my lousy english...
Keep writing :)
Rita

Anonymous said...

Bertrand Russell was indeed a great philosopher. I haven't actually read In Praise of Idleness, but I've read his History of Western Philosophy, ABC of Relativity, Why I Am Not A Christian, and some other book about ethics that I can't remember right now, and a lot of his analytical philosophy. And he was fantastic. Not so much in his personal life though...

Ben said...

Mr. Anonymous,

History of Western Philosophy sits proudly on my shelf as I type, though I have only used it as a reference book so far - I do intend to read it cover to cover but as yet I have not had time. The Why I am Not a Christian lecture was fantastic too, but I haven't read ABC of Relativity. I presume it comes recommended?

Anonymous said...

History reads very well from cover to cover, I think, because he gives you a very good sense of narrative as well as the actual ideas. ABC is certainly interesting but has probably been surpassed by more modern books now- if you wanted to read something about that I'd probably recommend Stephen Hawking or Brian Greene.

Ben said...

Rita,

Thank you for your comment - it's comforting to know that there might be other people out there for whom what I write strikes a chord, after all, where would we be without empathy and commonality of experience?

I'm not entirely sure that my sentiments are shared with the masses though. While I agree that the majority of people in the Western world would worry about their work and sex lives, and that most of us like to think we have a moral conscience (although some of us are more prone to taking a moral holiday than others - I love that phrase by the way), I don't think the the level of analysis to which I subject my thoughts and feelings - until now, largely in private - is in any way typical of my contemporaries. I doubt this is what you meant, but I think that there is more than just a passing connection between one's worries and the amount of thought one puts into a given event, action, situation etc. Anyway, perhaps this will become clearer as I write more.

Thank you for the encouragement, and your English is just fine: isn't the goal of language ultimately to make yourself understood? Well, I understand you perfectly well so there's no need to apologise - you should hear my Portuguese.