I'm not just talking about younger generations who have been raised on video games, 140 word life updates and a new shorthand for texting and chatting. Sure, they have 0 attention spans, but we can't really blame them for that...we created the world that they are the result of. No, I'm talking about all of us.
Apart from a few short-lived economic downturns, we have lived extremely well for about 40 years. Don't get me wrong...if you have lost your job recently or in the past, or have had to deal with significant financial strain, or worse, personal grief and challenges, you might have a hard time agreeing. But on the whole, western societies have had it really good for a long time. Us baby boomers (yup, I'm JUST old enough to be one) watched our parents work hard to give us good lives, but somehow it hasn't been all that hard for us. For us and for the younger generations, life has been extremely good.
In fact, so good that it has become....boring. Yup, just not enough challenge to get us through the day. Don't forget that we have evolved from beings that had to fight just to eat every day. Our bodies are not adapting fast enough to our social evolution, so we still have all the physical responses to danger and stress. What's worse, the stress we experience today is less intense and more long-term, when you compare it to fighting off a wild cat to keep your family alive.
Think about the last time you went to an attraction park, you know, the ones with the huge rides. You went on the easier rides first, then built up your courage to go on the monster scarier-than-hell major attraction. Wow, you felt exhilarated when you got off! But three minutes later, you wanted to go again. Why? Because your body has a physical need to re-experience the adrenaline rush that was triggered by your fear on the ride. Just like the any other addiction, we become emotionally and chemically addicted to adrenaline.
This addiction follows us throughout our lives. So we create crises to become stressed so that we can feel that adrenaline rush once again. We need more intensity every day to get our fix. This is why the great things around us just don't seem all that great after they have been in our lives for a while. They don't produce that adrenaline rush. They become...ok. But because we need the adrenaline, we seek out something new, something that will be even more great!
So, what to do about this? How do we recapture the greatness of our fabulous lives? How do we stop the frantic search for something better?
My answer comes from a different type of question: how do we appreciate the great in front of us but still continue to strive for future greatness? By becoming clear on what we want and need in our lives. Once we know that, we can see the great that exists and can dream of the great that has not yet arrived.
I have a whole lot more to say on this, but I'll stop for today. Give it some thought and let me know what you think about all of this.