I am
an optimist. I have taken Strengthsfinders, as any good Western, impericallly-driven businessperson or
student or pastor or human being has, and “Postitivity” is one of my strengths.
This is not particularly surprising to anyone who knows me. I tend to believe
in the best. I tend to hope for the best. I tend to expect the best. Because
what is the point of hope if it is less than? What is the point of love if it
is untrue? (Incidentally, this is vastly different than perfectionism, which
requires one’s self to be the best, rather than a more macro/situational view
that conveniently avoids fusing expectancy with responsibility for the expected
result.)
And
yet my experience of life, of humanity, of love and hate and safety and fear is
that it is not the best. God seems to have come to grips with this “less than”
living, and responded in extreme measure (the cross). Solomon (or whoever, I’m
not so dogmatic on authorship to really care) dallies around that point,
wallowing in Ecclesiastes around depression, resignation, and the general ennui
of carrying the fullest measure of human wisdom and wealth. So if then life itself
is destined to be flawed, to fall short of some goal, and if God himself
surrendered his son in resignation and grief, then the inevitable end of optimism
is that same experience: resignation and grief.
For
the optimist then, whose hindsight is always disappointment, the future remains
hope and potential that will, with seeming inevitability, end in resignation
and cynicism as a flawed present is experienced in persistent repetition. The future is potential. The past is disaster.
It’s this paradox that I live in: I wish I could give up on hope. Without hope,
there is no hopelessness. Without the impossible potential of the future, the
past moves from disappointment to realism: past, present, future; all simply
are.
Similarly,
I think, the curse of nostalgia (exaltation of the past) is pessimism, for it
is impossible to experience a present that is as pure as the (false) idealized past.
If the present is insufficient, then the primary promise of the future is
disappointment.
So what? I don’t know. We’re all screwed. Everything balances eventually, and none of it well: optimism and resignation, nostalgia and pessimism, or the monotone experience of a past, present, and future that simply is, which is void of hope. And yet here I am, unable to give up on hope. I know its cost. I know its inevitability. And I stand with my hands up, bracing against the great steamroller of life hoping, praying, and believing (help me in my unbelief) that the other end of death is resurrection.