Thursday, May 28, 2015

Thoughts (5/29/2015)

It is 5:25am and I am sitting on a rough-textured sofa reading Murakami’s Sputnik Sweetheart. Sumire has disappeared without a trace and K (the narrator) is currently reading the thoughts she had written down on her Powerbook prior to her disappearance. Nevertheless to say, I am reading this through K’s eyes, understanding her thoughts from K’s point of view.

As I read through every line and sentence of Sumire’s thoughts, I stopped at a quote Sumire had taken to heart, “Did you ever see anyone shot by a gun without bleeding?” From the literal perspective, it is true. Unless the bullet had miraculously taken a sharp turn outward from its course, there is no chance of avoiding bloodshed once the bullet has made contact with the body. In other words, contact = bloodshed.

Sumire then compares it with her past writing experience, how everything she has written has been “a dream, a sightless foetus called understanding, floating in the universal, overwhelming amniotic fluid of incomprehension” (149). I couldn’t help but compare it to my previous adolescent years of confusion. I was the typical adolescent teenager. I went through numerous existential crises. I pounded myself with questions such as, “Who am I really? What do I want to be in the future?” My poor adolescent soul must have been suffering a lot back then for who would ever want to think about this when I was already undergoing physical changes?

But that question, to this day, still remains unanswered. I thought I had it answered; I wanted to be an engineer who would change the world with one single creation. It was the typical dream for every aspiring individual in a top college. We all had one thing in common: we wanted to make an impact in society. We wanted to make a change to the world.

Yet, how important was that? Looking back, I see my younger teenage self trapped in that same fluid of incomprehension that Sumire so clearly described. I was a fool so to speak. I did not know anything about the real world and just dreamed to be a high and mighty individual.  Now that I am in college, I can see how naïve I was back then. Life isn’t as simple as a piece of toast; it’s so much more complicated.

Last semester, I took a Women and Gender Studies class, a decision that left my friends and family confused. They asked me why out of all the available classes would I choose to take a Women and Gender Studies class. My mom especially thought it was a useless class as it wouldn’t help career wise.

Nevertheless, it was the most eye-opening class I had ever taken in my life. Though I expected to be taught about the importance of feminism or something equivalent, my professor gave me much more. I became aware of the problematic messages that society placed on gender. Though it was a bit on the feminism side, I became aware of why it was problematic. To sum it up, women are valued just for the sexual organ. We are the ones responsible for producing the later generation. We are significant for maintaining the human race.

What is so problematic about this is that it’s the sole aspect of our femininity that we are valued for. Women have so much potential and so much to contribute to the community. It saddens me to see women being objectified instead of being emphasized as a whole. But who could blame society for that? It’s just the traditional viewpoints that are influencing how society views women. As conservatism holds a strong presence in society, it is no shock that this perspective holds a strong role even in modern-day.

Yet on the other facet, there are women who want to be viewed as dominant. One of the major events that took place on campus last semester was the class government election. I remember scrolling through the candidates’ faces, examining their facial features and the multifarious aspects of each campaign. Each person or team had one thing in common: they all wanted to make a difference to our class. And that’s true; who wants to have a person or team as a leader who thinks there is nothing that needs to be changed about our current situation? We can never be satisfied with what we have and we always want for more.

But there is a line between making a difference and wanting to make that difference. As I read, I couldn’t help wondering if these candidates really wanted to be the people that they wrote themselves out to be. I didn’t personally know any of them so there was no way I knew for certain. It wasn’t, however, hard to think that they were doing this as an aspect they could put on their resumes so companies could think better of them.

After reading Sumire’s thoughts,  I like to think that we, as college students, are all trapped in that bubble of incomprehension. It dawns me to think of an individual who really knows what they want to be in the future. How could you ever be so certain of who you want to be? I myself know I like the mathematical sciences but I love to write essays (like what I am doing now at 5am) and I love to learn about the liberal arts. I cannot, however, go to either; I want to find the midpoint between the two extremes. I’m just not there yet.


My main objective in life is then to find that gun and shoot open that fluid of incomprehension that I am still trapped within. And that gun is located in the midpoint.