Success, Fight Club, Strippers and Socialists

“We have just lost cabin pressure.” – Fight Club

The second rule of Wilder Club is if this is your first visit, you have to comment.  Oh, and this is a repost since I have to get up pretty early tomorrow.

I had a conversation with a friend today.  Oh, sure, I hear you say, what would an iconoclastic iron-jawed individualist with a body odor redolent of medium rare ribeye (with just a hint of pepper) like John Wilder need with a friend?  I guess we all have our little weaknesses.  And dogs follow me.  Because I smell like steak.

In this particular case as with most of my friends, I’ve known this friend for years.  I’ve known most of my close friends longer than The Boy has been alive, and he’s in college now.  It’s nice.  If a day, a week, a month or a year goes by, so what?  We can still restart the conversation where we left off.  It’s as comfortable as watching a movie you’ve seen a dozen times.

I’ll make the observation that the only place where the character of people change is in a movie – almost all of my close friends have the same sense of humor and the same sense of values that they had when our friendships were forming.  Absent a significant emotional event, people are a constant.

And I like that.

There is a corresponding trust that comes with being a close friend – honesty.  That’s why when talking with my friend, I really enjoyed the chance to be honest.  Honesty is difficult because it requires that trust, because really honest criticism is hard to take, even when it comes from a friend.  Or a co-worker.  Or a relative.  Or someone you just met.  Or your UPS® delivery guy.  Oh, wait.  Most people don’t like honest.  But my friends do.

This particular friend is really in a good position in life, which seems to be a common pattern with my friends.  He has a spouse that makes more money than he does, and, in general, the household probably brings in enough cash each month so that Nigerian princes send emails to them asking for money.  They’re wealthy enough that they donate to the homeless.  This appears to be a more socially acceptable donation strategy than my “donation to the topless,” scheme.

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Yes, this is the only joke that I’ve ever seen that involves both the Greco-Roman philosophy of stoicism and stripping.  I’m sure that Seneca would be proud.

But lest ye want to class my friend as the evil, selfish, wealthy type, he’s not.  The family has a huge number of kids, and it’s a close family.  My friend is constantly taking time off to go to athletic events, and when we catch up, I can sense that the relationship he has with his kids isn’t a surface relationship – it’s genuine and deep.  I can tell, because I know people who understand genuine relationships, who listen to both sides of a family argument – my neighbors.

And yet . . . despite the wealth, despite the great family, my friend feels that there’s something missing.  He is as high as he wants to go in the company he works at – any higher and the travel demands would pull him away from family.  He’s long since mastered his job – there is little that can be thrown at him that he hasn’t seen in the last fifteen or so years.  So, his condition is one of high pay, mastery of work, and, improbably, discontent.

John Wilder:  “You realize you have an advantage that 99% of people would die for.  You’re financially secure.  You can quit your job anytime.  Literally, you could walk in to your boss this afternoon and quit.  Your lifestyle wouldn’t change a bit.”

Not Elon Musk:  “Yes.”

Unlikely Voice of Wisdom John Wilder:  “So, what is it you want to do?”

Really, I Promise It Isn’t Elon Musk:  “I need to think about it.”

Channeling Tyler Durden From Fight Club® John Wilder:  “No.  If you think about it, you’ll end up doing nothing but thinking about it.  You have to do something.  Physically start it.  This weekend.  I’ll check back on Monday to see how you did.”

There is a scene in the movie Fight Club™ where Tyler Durden holds a gun to the head of a liquor store clerk.  If you haven’t seen the movie, I strongly suggest it.  I probably watch it once a month while I write – I think there are few movies that communicate the human condition in modern life so well.

Pugsley doesn’t miss many school days.

JACK, in voiceover:  On a long enough time line, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.

CLERK:  Please… don’t…

TYLER DURDEN: Give me your wallet.

Tyler pulls out the driver’s license.

TYLER:  Raymond K. Hessel. 1320 SE Benning, apartment A.  A small, cramped basement apartment.

RAYMOND:  How’d you know?

TYLER:  They give basement apartments letters instead of numbers.  Raymond, you’re going to die.  Is this a picture of Mom and Dad?

RAYMOND:  Yes.

TYLER:  Your mom and dad will have to call kindly doctor so-and-so to dig up your dental records, because there won’t be much left of your face.

RAYMOND:  Please, God, no!                            

JACK: Tyler…

TYLER:  An expired community college student ID card.  What did you used to study, Raymond K. Hessel?

RAYMOND:  S-S-Stuff.

TYLER:  “Stuff.”  Were the mid-terms hard?  I asked you what you studied.

JACK:  Tell him!

RAYMOND:  Biology, mostly.

TYLER:  Why?

RAYMOND:  I… I don’t know…

TYLER:  What did you want to be, Raymond K. Hessel?

Tyler cocks the .357 magnum Colt© Python™ pointed at Raymond’s head.

TYLER:  The question, Raymond, was “what did you want to be?”

JACK:  Answer him!

RAYMOND:  A veterinarian!

TYLER:  Animals.

RAYMOND:  Yeah … animals and s-s-s —

TYLER:  Stuff.  That means you have to get more schooling.

RAYMOND:  Too much school.

TYLER:  Would you rather be dead?

RAYMOND:  No, please, no, God, no!

Tyler uncocks the gun, lowers it.

TYLER:  I’m keeping your license.  I know where you live.  I’m going to check on you.  If you aren’t back in school and on your way to being a veterinarian in six weeks, you will be dead.  Get the hell out of here.

JACK:  I feel sick.

TYLER:  Imagine how he feels.

Tyler brings the gun to his own head, pulls the trigger — click.  It’s empty.

JACK:  I don’t care, that was horrible.

TYLER:  Tomorrow will be the most beautiful day of Raymond K. Hessell’s life.  His breakfast will taste better than any meal he has ever eaten.

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How dare you . . . make Greta uncomfortable.

And it’s true.  I tend to think that everyone’s life would be a little better if they had Tyler Durden to be a life coach, to ever so gently coax them to be the best they can be while holding a .357 magnum Colt® Python™ to their head.  That seems to be a bit frowned upon, so that leaves my friends with me.  See how lucky you are?

In my role as Dr. Durden, I’ve noticed that there’s a problem some people have.  It’s being too clever.  It’s thinking.  How do I know?  It’s my problem that I try to compensate for by writing and doing.  If I think about doing something, it will never get done.  I keep thinking about fixing the banister that broke when we moved into the house a decade ago.  It’s never been high on my list, since people falling down stairs is funny, with extra points if they are really old.  But thinking about doing something never accomplishes anything.

If I plan to do it, it will get done.  Half of my time driving to and from work on a day I’m going to write a post, I’m writing it in my head, selecting jokes, thinking of themes.  It’s also spent thinking of how I’m going to connect the idea I want to share with students who might be forced to read this post when Mrs. Grundy tells them to compare and contrast my work with that poseur, Mark Twain, in high school in the year 2248 (that’s when Kirk will be a sophomore).

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Okay, generally on my drive to work I have about five or ten minutes between cars, so it would take several hours to get a group of cars behind me like that.  But a man has to have goals!

It may look like I’m driving to work, but I’m really plotting out what I’m going to write about.  To be honest, it sometimes takes both lanes to do that.  I wish the State Patrol® would be a little more understanding to artists like me.

Thankfully, The Mrs. is.

The Mrs. and I had a conversation the other night.  It may or may not have involved wine – I’m not telling unless I’ve been subpoenaed and am under oath to a House subcommittee.  Actually, it wasn’t so much a conversation as The Mrs. describing to me how she felt about this little project I publish three times a week.

I don’t make any money on this blog, though I’ve made clear since day one that can change at any time.  I have plans for several (eventual) ways to do that including adding subliminal messages causing you to want to pay for my health insurance.  It looks like it’s already worked for Bernie Sanders.

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In a socialist paradise all bloggers make $450,000 a year, right?  But I worry that for this Christmas we won’t have an Elf on a Shelf, we’ll have a Bernie on a Gurney.

No, at this point, writing is a hobby.  But it’s a hobby that takes over 20 hours a week, sometimes closer to 30 hours.  I still have a job, and I won’t stop interacting my family, so most nights I won’t even start writing before 9pm.  A lot of that time comes from time I’d normally be selfishly engaged in what you mortals call “sleep”, but a chunk of that time comes directly from time I’d be spending with The Mrs.

When I’m writing, I’m simply not available.  I’m writing.

The Mrs.:  “You know, I would certainly have an issue with the time that you spend writing, if it weren’t important.”  There was more to this, where she detailed the number of hours I spend.  But I keyed in on the word “Important.”

I was a little surprised by that.  “Important?”

The Mrs.:  “Yes.  I can see that what you’re writing about is important.  People need to hear it.  So keep doing it.”

Okay, that proves she never reads this stuff.

But as I talked more with my friend, the concept of “meaning” came up.

My Friend Who is Really Most Certainly Not Elon Musk:  “So, it’s about meaning?”

Suddenly as Wise as the Roman Philosopher Seneca John Wilder:  “That’s silly.  You don’t go off chasing ‘meaning’ in your life.  Pick out something you like to do, and do it.  But figure out how to make it important to other people.  You like to woodwork, right?  You say you never have time to do it.  Do it this weekend.  Film it.  Put it up on YouTube®.  I’ll be checking up with you on Monday.”

I asked myself, why is my friend working at all?  I think because he feels he’s supposed to work.  That having a job is a rule, it’s what he’s always done.  The problem that many of us have is that we tend to create rules where there aren’t any rules.  I’m not sure why.  Perhaps we need to justify what we do.  Perhaps it’s like my two important rules for life:

  1. Don’t tell everything you know.

Success?  My friend is already successful in most ways a person can be successful.  Their life is really good.  I told them, directly, “You’ve been given so many gifts.  If you don’t make something special of your life, you’re wasting it.”

Interestingly, this applies to you, too.

And me.

How will your breakfast taste tomorrow?

Author: John

Nobel-Prize Winning, MacArthur Genius Grant Near Recipient writing to you regularly about Fitness, Wealth, and Wisdom - How to be happy and how to be healthy. Oh, and rich.

22 thoughts on “Success, Fight Club, Strippers and Socialists”

    1. Tis true. Every day is a bonus for me as two things could have killed me in my life. God must not be done with me yet, thank You Jesus.

      1. When i was an atheist (circa 1996), i had a moment when God * communicated * to me the following: i could kill you RIGHT NOW, but i have other plans for you…

        I have a moderate foundation in science, so i struggled for a month or 2 trying to attain some form of scientific explanation for what i experienced. And then God reminded me of that again (1999) when i was riding in a private airplane that was getting tossed around in bad storm!

        In 2012 i had a moment where a permanent solution to a temporary problem was the course of action i decided on. I look back on that moment as a near death experience, and i do not look at life the same way ever since as well. Someday i MIGHT take the time to determine which religion i align with the most, but i’m definitely NOT an atheist!

    2. The 40-something woman driving the Mercedes survived, those are well-engineered German cars. The people she hit were quick-fried BBQed. Lawyers beat ambulences to the scene.

      https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-08-04/windsor-hills-fiery-crash-kills-multiple-people-pregnant-woman

      Moral: don’t text and drive. A woman was killed just outside my subdivision enterance like this after doing a full speed curb hit and A-Team intro car flip just outside my subdivision entrance.

      https://www.cdc.gov/transportationsafety/distracted_driving/index.html

      1. Single framing the video, she is holding her left arm high out the window. Why?

        1. I have read elsewhere that she wasn’t looking at her cellphone, she had just left drunk after an argument with her boyfriend. Maybe she deliberately accelerated to run the red light with the intent of being the BBQee, not the BBQer. Remember my previous comment about how you gotta be really careful with the running away from home thing, it never turns out like you expect…

  1. What is Rule #2? Barney Fife stated that it was “obey all the rules” when there are only 2 rules. Rule #1 was “no writing on the walls”. As we spent the night in Mt. Airy just south of the Andy Griffith Hwy., the shoe fits.

    I think it’s human nature to be sorta dissatisfied, despite how successful one is.

  2. I really laughed my ass off at that epictetus meme. I have a book of his or on him in my to read que.

  3. The coffee with extra sugar and creamer is gonna go great with the extra ten slices of bacon! But if a gun is held to my head I reckon I could manage another dozen slices!

  4. Even grading this one on a curve? 50% is…what grade?

    Which is by way of saying, “Yes, but…

    Because Life Coach Tyler Durden’s approach works for Raymond, who was wasting his life and talents clerking in a liquor store on the night shift. For some people, that would be heaven.

    Unfortunately, the other 5,000,000 examples of “Go do what gives your life meaning!” is how we got insufferable ignorant tw*ts like Greta Thunberg, and 4,999,999 Art and French poetry majors holding down barrista jobs at Starbucks, and trying to pay off their $150K in student loan debt on minimum wage.

    The life coach lesson they should have gotten has Jack and S**t to do with “finding meaning”.
    There are three legs on the stool of Life.
    One is what you’re good at.
    Another is what you love doing.
    But the third is what earns you enough to live on.
    Nota bene there is no universe where you can plop yourself down on a successful two-legged stool, including this life lesson.

    Those 5M wastes of skin and oxygen need Life Coach Tyler , right effing NOW, because they listened to Life Coach Dandelion Moonbat Butterfly-Unicornfart, who told them “Do what gives your life meaning!”

    No! No!NO!!!, Princess Snowflake. Do what pays your bills, and from there, home in on the point where those other two things intersect. Work, study, and delay gratification, to get to that spot.

    Your Not-Elon-Musk friend has nailed at least two of those things. But does he love his work?
    If so, leave the guy alone. He’s done.

    If not, he’s not. Yet.
    Nudge him in that direction, if that’s the case.

    But if somebody wants to Life Coach Greta with a .357 Colt Python, I’ll donate the bullets to make sure it’s loaded.

    You’re welcome.

    And thus endeth your life coaching lesson. 😉

    1. Oh, I agree!!!

      This advice isn’t universal, for all people, at all times. This advice is for particular people at particular parts of their lives.

      I’ve seen some people with real promise to have careers in *real* professions that zombie through life, or people going through the motions rather than attempting to push farther.

      And, as much as I don’t care for Greta or her message, she’s piled enough cash that she’ll never miss a meal . . . .

      1. Mmm, maybe not so much.

        Then I heard what sounded like a voice among the four living creatures, saying, “Two pounds of wheat for a whole day’s wages, and six pounds of barley for a whole day’s wages…

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