Not long ago, I wrote a post about the phrase "The new normal." I complained (surprise!) about the extreme overuse of that phrase, as well as a few others.
What I've noticed lately is that a lot of people have adopted yet another phrase to either describe the circumstances they're going through, alleviate the pain those circumstances are causing or just admit without admitting that they've let go of the reins and it's out of their control completely.
"It's a journey."
I remember years ago when Thirtysomething (a truly heinous show) was on. I was talking about it with my friend Josh, and he had a great line. I was saying what a bunch of whiners all the characters on the show were - which they were (ad people, go figure). He said, "What they call problems, our parents used to call life."
I think the same thing applies here. The new agey-ness of the word "journey" is just camouflage for a more colloquial term: "shit happens."
Don't get the wrong idea about this pet peeve of mine. I'm in favor of anything that makes it easier on people to get through tough times. Life gets more and more demanding, bad things happen. And if couching each event as a "journey" helps give you comfort or perspective, then have at it. But it really doesn't apply to everything. Really. It doesn't.
I think when it does apply, it's easy to recognize. For example my close personal friend and one time office wife Janice MacLeod decided to give up her life here, travel the world and start a new life of her own shaping. She eventually moved to Paris, met a butcher from Poland, married him, started a business that makes her happier than advertising ever did or could, and wrote a bestselling book about it.
That my friends is a journey.
Every time I hear someone use the word, it sounds like they're surprised at the "journey" they're on.
It's as if they have a naivety about what can happen in life - a lack of situational awareness about how random the world can actually be sometimes.
As anyone who's been around a few years and experienced a certain measure of life will tell you, the road we're all traveling on is not straight and smooth for anyones journey. Anyone. It never has been.
I suppose that comes as a surprise to some people.
Which always comes as a surprise to me.
6 comments:
Awesome.
Awesome.
ISWYDT.
Loving your posts lately. Not that I don't normally love them. But there is something in the last several that sound different, somehow deeper (yet still funny) and more thoughtful.
Speaking of Janice… and her wonderful, inspiring journey...
My Stepmom is reading Janice's book after I posted your post and she adores it. She says she disappears in it, reads every story, every letter and it makes her feel like she is there. She doesn't want it to be over. Please tell Janice that she had made a reader very happy. I'm reading it next. Can't wait.
Keep up the writing, Gelberg. It's great.
Wow, Carrie, I am speechless - no easy feat. Thank you so much for the kind words. Deep and thoughtful are so rarely used to describe my writing, so I am flattered beyond measure.
So glad your stepmom's enjoy Janice's book. It really is a great read. I found myself reading it slowly because I never wanted it to end.
You keep reading, I'll keep writing. Thank you for making my day.
I love your friend's reaction to Thirtysomething. I'm the first to admit that I grew up in such a bubble of comfort, real life usually feels totally jarring to me. And pushes me to blog about the journey I'm on...
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