Read The Douchebag Bible Online
Authors: TJ Kirk
days, I focus on the hate. It’s a lot better to hate than
to despair. But then there are moments like these
when they hate isn’t large enough to drown out the
truth: You are unhappy, TJ.
You always have been. You always will be. No
matter what wealth or status you accrue, no matter
how many people love and support you, no matter
how many battles you win—you will always be
unhappy. There’s something wrong with your
brain chemistry. You’ll never stop tearing yourself
apart. You’ll never stop being your own worst critic.
I am so damn weary of it all. I’m so tired of
living a life where I live in hatred and take long
vacations in depression. I’m so tired of this mental
dissonance that plagues me.
It’s becoming unbearable.
The mistake I was making when I wrote that is that
I was still judging myself on the basis of what society
expected from me. I was still viewing the world as
though I were owned by my culture, rather than
being my own property. But I changed my
perspective, as I am free to do.
The human experience is largely subjective, so
rational thought still offers a wide variety of thought
and opinion. It’s not as if rational thought will cause
us to coalesce into some beastly collective of twin-
minded freaks who agree on everything.
The greatest gift we human beings have is our
ability to choose to perceive the world differently
than we've been instructed. We can even override
our own predispositions with enough willpower!
And as my friend, author Howard Bloom, often says,
“new ways of seeing lead to new ways of being.”
I have never aspired to change the world,
simply because that task is beyond me. There are too
many variables involved; too many disparate wills
pushing and pulling the world in too many different
directions. If I genuinely aspired to improve the
world, I’d be crippled by depression, never able to
shake from my head the inescapable conclusion that
my efforts are exercised in futility. The world will not
change because I tell it to, and even if it did change,
I would have no control over the nature of that
change.
Yet, if I realize that it's not my job to chance the
world and that I'm only responsible for myself and
my own actions, then I don't feel powerless any
more. I don't feel like I'm a speck of dust, but the
center of the universe. Because I am my own
universe. And when I die, my mind is gone and my
universe is gone with it. I know, objectively, that
matter and energy will continue to exist long after
my demise, but I don't need to concern myself with
that too much. It's beyond my ability to affect or
control and accepting that is far more sublime a
feeling than wishing things were otherwise.
I’ve not, since adopting my new worldview, felt
a tremendous need in myself for a deeper meaning.
I’m a fairly worldly and hedonistic fellow who finds
the pleasures of this plane of existence sufficient to
sustain myself.
I think that many people like to wander
through the desert of their own elaborate self-
markers—grandiose little chunks of narrative that
they plant into the ground to remind themselves of
their perceived highs and lows. Plant a flag where I
met my wife, plant a flag where my dog died, plant a
flag where I started working an administrative job
over a the offices of Penguin Publishing.
And they look back at the landscape, pocked
with flags waving in the harsh dessert wind and they
say to themselves, “I had a life. I had a self. These
flags prove it.”
But then the camera pans back and we discover
that the desert is vast beyond reckoning. And our
protagonist, the flag-planting human being who
affirms himself to the universe, has journeyed less
than a millimeter across this barren wasteland’s
surface. The flags that he planted are microscopic.
Why then compare yourself to the desert? Why
not compare yourself instead to the millimeter you
have traveled and say, “Ah. It was a god millimeter.
A good speck.” Accepting insignificance and
embracing limitation is so much more satisfying
than aspiring to accomplish great things when you
are too small and too temporary to truly do so.
Others find the value of their live in the concept
of God. Religion. I don't address it too much in this
book, but I will harken back to a series of questions
I once asked about God.
What is God? Is it a what? Or is it a who? Is it an it?
Is he a he? Is she a she?
Believers say that God is the entity that
created creation. Everything you see is the work of
God: trees, hills, bumble bees, pancakes, stars,
chocolate pudding, lava, incandescent light bulbs.
God made it all. He’s a busy guy, if he is a guy, and
if he exists, and if he is discernible to the human