A song to sing? | LOH Community Contest #154

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I seem to find myself drawn once again to the latest Ladies of Hive community contest, rather sooner than I would've expected to contribute again. But I read the new questions yesterday, and one of them just keeps scratching at me, I guess.


What is your big dream for your life? If money were no object and you could do with your time whatever you wished, what would you do with it? What would you create?

In my book, this is the sort of question fated to remain unanswered by a good chunk of the population. It's cutesy, it's whimsical, it's got that what-if quality that we so hunger for in our fantasy questions. Maybe that's just it. It's got too much "what if"-ness to be taken for a serious question.

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It's a question that grates, and so rather than answer it, I'm trying to figure out why. (As ever, if this needs mentioning, this is a freeflow thought freewrite. It is not an attack on the LOH community, their contests, question material or whatever else. Rather, I find this particular question symbolic of a larger mentality in our society that warrants talking about.)

For one, I don't buy the "big dream" sham. It's reductive.

To start with, not everyone has a big dream. Most of us have an assortment of smaller dreams that typically rearrange themselves throughout our lives in order of their importance at a specific time. But the number of people with a big dream are very few, I think.

On a personal level, what can I say? My big dream is to write. It is my fate to be an author. Maybe. But down the years, that's made me feel bad whenever I wasn't writing, or when I was engaging in other interests, like art or photography. Wasn't that a waste of time, if writing is "my big dream"?

As I get a little older, I find myself more drawn to having a family. I've always had strong maternal instincts, and it's a very important thing in my life to, at some point, become a mother. Wait, is that my big dream now? But what about the writing?

I love travel. I dream of seeing places like Kyoto, or Central America. I guess you could say I love travel more than certain other people in the sense that I resonate with that lifestyle more than people who're content with the occasional holiday. Is travel my big dream? And if not, how big is it exactly?

Surely, we need a scale, a measurement, how else would I know to categorize and award the "big dream" ribbon otherwise?

That's me. But many people won't be able to even pinpoint one big dream, let alone a few more. And if we believe that people should follow the "big one", we make it easy for people without a big dream or who maybe haven't identified their big dream, well, we kinda make 'em feel like failures.

Reminds me of a conversation I had with someone a few years ago, a friend who'd finished college, and he calls me and asked pretty much the same question as the LOH community. I said write. I'd write even if I had money. And if I didn't. And he said "that's just it, it's easy for you, you know what you need to do". And there was such wistfulness in his voice, such sorrow, I remember it clearly. An example of someone very clever, very gifted made to feel like a loser for not having identified his big dream (or maybe not having one).

Our definition of money is, to a large extent, ours.

Goes without saying that money is a necessity in the world we live in. Sadly, you have to provide for yourself, and perhaps for others, before you can even entertain the idea of passions and skills and hobbies. Though I have, in my life, found that a lot of the things people define as necessities, and subsequently slave away at a 9-to-5 for, vary wildly.

If we're to strip down to the bare necessities, we need money for food, for clothes, for a place to live, utilities, transport, and a few others. Yet you'll find a lot of people get lost along the way, and start including other complimentary stuff in their needs for a good life.

Coffee at Starbucks, holidays abroad, expensive moisturizer.... to each his own. And while these small things may make life more pleasurable, they're not necessities. Not really. You could go without them, and maybe find a job that pays less, but also allows you to work less, and thus have more time for that big dream.

Obviously, this isn't true for everyone, but I've met people like that, who will complain about their demanding job, but all the while, indulge it, allow it to rob them of their time.

As a creative person, I try to remind myself of that. I'm actuely aware of the necessity of money, so I always try to phrase my purchases from that perspective.

Sure, I could get a gym membership, but that costs some money. Obviously. Spending a monthly amount on this membership will make my reserves deplete more quickly by X months, or will mean that I need to work more this month, to break even, taking time from my writing, my art, my Hive, whatever. Am I willing to make this trade?

Ownership, to me, is vital and non-negotiable to healthy living.

You can do with your time as you wish. It's implicit in the phrase "your time".

This one also boils down to ownership, and buying into a victim sort of mentality. By ascribing our time to some mysterious, often malevolent third party (e.g. our boss, the system), we also absolve ourselves of any wasted time, unfulfilled potential, dreams, and so on.

This reminds me of another blog I wrote a few months back about chores. Beyond work, which we kinda covered above, our time is taken up a fair bit by "chores". When I'm done writing this, I'll go prepare myself a meal. Some meat, an omelet, nothing fancy, but it will take 20 minutes maybe. Yet I'm not doing it 'cause I have to, as the word "chore" would have you believe.

I'm doing it because it's what I want to do with those 20 minutes of my time. I could get away with much less. I could get a sandwich done and the dishes disposed of in 5 minutes, thus saving fifteen. But I don't want a sandwich. I don't think that's a healthy choice for me, and I don't feel my body would feel as nurtured and replenished after eating, though my immediate hunger would abate.

I cleaned the house yesterday. Didn't have do, but I wanted to, because I like a nice, clean space.

Once again, ownership. And better time management. By complaining our time is not our own and of all the stuff we "have to do", we conveniently sweep under the rug the rest of our spare time which often drains into meaningless scrolling, TV gazing, and other passive, unfulfilling activities.

Finally, your big dream doesn't need to be "to create".

This ties to a pet peeve of mine of art being regarded for so long as a bohemian, sort-of bourgeois luxury. If you have a fanciful big dream, it's gotta be to create something. Why? Maybe your big dream's gardening. Or setting a record for rollerblading. That's not creating, or particularly creative.

By infusing people with this reverence of "creating", we also downplay the many other uses of art. Why should you write, if it's not gonna be the next great American novel? Why paint if you're not Picasso-level?

Because it heals.

Because it feeds something you thought buried.

Because it restores your faith in enjoying yourself that many of us forget once we leave childhood.

Honestly, if I get one big dream right now, it's to heal from all the things that are not mine to carry, all the trauma, and hurt, and words that shouldn't have been spoken. And that takes time and receives considerable opposition, often from the voice inside my own head. Compared to that, rearranging my "chores" or my work assignments so I can find time to write or draw seems like a walk in the park.

What about you? Any big dreams you wanna talk about? :)

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Dreams? I got a few of those...I want to be a big orca on hive. But if money would not be a problem I would reach for whale level instead. I want to sell more of my art. publishing my book is still something I would like to do at some point in the future. But all in all I am also happy with what I do now. I get to play games I like. Then I write blog about them and get paid. Occasionally I sell a piece of art...yes I think I am living my dream life right now.

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(Edited)

I admire your thought-provoking perspective on the "big dream" concept. I've always had this mindset but never been able to put it into words. It's just up there in my head. Reading your piece, I'm like, "my thoughts exactly!" Hehe.

Like many, we are faced with pressures and self-doubt when we don't identify a big dream. It helps to remember that we are dynamic beings, and as such our aspirations can be fluid. The chase after the "big dream" takes our eyes off the little dreams that as a whole make our life meaningful.

I don't have a big dream but one of my many little dreams is writing short stories. Thanks for this piece, it is well thought out. !LADY

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Lol, my big dream is literally to not have to work. That’s it, just not doing something for others benefit to earn money.
What would I do if I didn’t have to work…. Literally could give 2 fucks, I’m good at bobbling around and figure something out.
I guess people call that retirement.
Strange word re-tire. As in tired again 🤪
Something feels wrong about that word

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My big dream is to get married to the person I want because I see marriage as a very big achievement and also to be a great musician

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Dreams do come in different sizes and I suppose most people have more than one; it's not just one big dream for many. You have identified some of yours, which is good because we need goals. The one about figuring out your own head is probably something everyone should do but many fill their time with anything else so they never have to think about this issue.

One dream or goal I have is to understand everything about everything. From physics to chemistry to biology to psychology to sociology, the progression from the basic forces inside ourselves to the forces as we interact with others. I have the concept that at it's base, everything comes down to forces of attraction and repulsion. Seems true about physics and chemistry, and then as we go up the ladder it manifests itself in communicating one of two things - come here, or go away. That's it. Everything we do, we're either trying to get close to something or to get away from something. Like eating - we want to get to something we want to eat but get away from something that wants to eat us. Religion and good vs evil comes down to good being what I want to come to me, and evil being what I want to go away. How do I get my god's attention to bring me good things and avoid the bad spirits who want to harm me.

Being the science/engineer type, I learn things by building things and seeing what they do. So one way to learn about the world and god is to build a world and BE god. I'm doing it through programming my own world/game where I make the rules, hopefully so that people can enjoy the agency of deciding what to come to and go away from. Writing is similar in that you create a literary world and you're it's god. I'm sure the act of writing will help both you and your readers better understand their world and themselves.

!LADY

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