God only creates ridiculous geniuses like U2..and you, too
by Ann Powers, NPR:
The Dream Of Ridiculous Men
The last short story Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote is about being seriously
ridiculous. In "The Dream of a Ridiculous Man," an intellectual prone to
existentialist despair is saved from suicide when, in a vision, he
discovers a parallel planet where humanity has never sinned. "It was
like being in love with each other, but an all-embracing, universal
feeling," he tells the reader. This contact with Eden reinvigorates him,
but then, during a playful moment, he teaches the planet's innocents
how to deceive each other — and this leads to a catastrophic, Biblical
fall. By the time the man awakens, his Eden has become just like Earth,
full of violence, crime and war. It's the world he once thought was
meaningless. And still, the man finds himself redeemed. He stands on a
corner, preaching the essential goodness of humanity, despite his
knowledge of the equally omnipresent potential for corruption. He's a
rube for being optimistic, and he knows it. But he declares at the
story's end, "I shall go on and on!"
The serious ridiculousness
expressed in that conclusion differs from the unthinking kind that
entangles people every day. Ordinary ridiculousness comes from not being
aware — from either simply not thinking about bad or excessive choices,
or from embracing blind faith in the self, a God or a system. A
seriously ridiculous person is clear-eyed. She knows that idealism is a
fool's game to begin with, and that every conviction carries the risk of
closed-mindedness. But she takes on belief as a practice, a way of
being around others that seeks common ground. The ridiculous man or
woman has found a way to connect things within life's inevitably broken
landscape. It's an act of reaching out that can never be fully
fulfilled, but which changes things in the moment, which is all we
really have.
When Bono told a Time magazine reporter in 2002 that the right to be ridiculous was something he held dear, he was...continued here
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