Maria Popova shares this from her extraordinary Brain Pickings series:
Friedrich Nietzsche, who believed that embracing difficulty is essential for a fulfilling life, considered the journey of self-discovery one of the greatest and most fertile existential difficulties. In 1873, as he was approaching his thirtieth birthday, Nietzsche addressed this perennial question of how we find ourselves and bring forth our gifts in a beautiful essay titled Schopenhauer as Educator (public library), part of his Untimely Meditations.
Friedrich Nietzsche, who believed that embracing difficulty is essential for a fulfilling life, considered the journey of self-discovery one of the greatest and most fertile existential difficulties. In 1873, as he was approaching his thirtieth birthday, Nietzsche addressed this perennial question of how we find ourselves and bring forth our gifts in a beautiful essay titled Schopenhauer as Educator (public library), part of his Untimely Meditations.
Nietzsche, translated here by Daniel Pellerin,
writes:
Any human being who does not wish
to be part of the masses need only stop making things easy for himself. Let him
follow his conscience, which calls out to him: "Be yourself! All that you
are now doing, thinking, desiring, all that is not you." Every young soul
hears this call by day and by night and shudders with excitement at the
premonition of that degree of happiness that eternities have prepared for those
who will give thought to their true liberation. There is no way to help any
soul attain this happiness, however, so long as it remains shackled with the
chains of opinion and fear. And how hopeless and meaningless life can become
without such a liberation! There is no drearier, sorrier creature in nature
than the man who has evaded his own genius and who squints now towards the
right, now towards the left, now backwards, now in any direction whatever.
Echoing Picasso's proclamation that "to know
what you’re going to draw, you have to begin drawing,"
Nietzsche considers the only true antidote to this existential dreariness:
No one can build you the bridge on
which you, and only you, must cross the river of life. There may be countless
trails and bridges and demigods who would gladly carry you across; but only at
the price of pawning and forgoing yourself. There is one path in the world that
none can walk but you. Where does it lead? Don't ask, walk!
But this path to finding ourselves, Nietzsche is
careful to point out, is no light stroll:
How can man know himself? It is a
dark, mysterious business: if a hare has seven skins, a man may skin himself
seventy times seven times without being able to say, "Now that is truly
you; that is no longer your outside." It is also an agonizing, hazardous
undertaking thus to dig into oneself, to climb down toughly and directly into
the tunnels of one's being. How easy it is thereby to give oneself such
injuries as no doctor can heal. Moreover, why should it even be necessary given
that everything bears witness to our being – our friendships and animosities,
our glances and handshakes, our memories and all that we forget, our books as
well as our pens. For the most important inquiry, however, there is a method.
Let the young soul survey its own life with a view of the following question:
"What have you truly loved thus far? What has ever uplifted your soul,
what has dominated and delighted it at the same time?" Assemble these
revered objects in a row before you and perhaps they will reveal a law by their
nature and their order: the fundamental law of your very self. Compare these
objects, see how they complement, enlarge, outdo, transfigure one another; how
they form a ladder on whose steps you have been climbing up to yourself so far;
for your true self does not lie buried deep within you, but rather rises
immeasurably high above you, or at least above what you commonly take to be
your I.
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