Juan David’s Newsletter - January 15th, 2023
The Steppenwolf's Guide to Laughing at Life's Distortions
Good morning,
Last week, I released my 2022 Annual Review and it's been the most impactful piece of writing I've ever created.
Not only did it inspire Ismail to write a similar reflection, but it also touched the hearts of many readers who reached out to me, expressing how much it resonated with them.
My annual review covers what I accomplished and learned throughout the year, but it also serves as a mirror for readers to reflect on their own lives.
Reading it is not just about me, but it's an opportunity for self-reflection and introspection. If you haven't had a chance to read it yet, you can find it here.
In 2023, one of my goals (find my other 2023 goals) is to study Buckminster Fuller deeply. I started last Monday, and it’s been quite the rollercoaster from being confused and melancholic about his ideas not going further to getting incredibly excited to see a glimpse of his grand vision.
I hope to understand it in the coming weeks and will share my findings with you. So far, I’ve learned about the Geodesic Dome, the Dymaxion Car, House, and Map, Triton City (a floating city), and the dynamic and multi-dimensional universe Fuller tried to make us see.
I have to admit, it has been way more interesting than I thought, and I’m genuinely excited.
As much as I want to tell you about Buckminster Fuller this week, I will hold onto that (you can still read my Twitter), and I will tell you about a book I finished reading this week, Steppenwolf.
The Steppenwolf's Guide to Laughing at Life's Distortions
If you prefer, you can read this essay on my website.
I became interested in Steppenwolf because I found this random quote on the internet.
Whoever wants music instead of noise, joy instead of pleasure, soul instead of gold, creative work instead of business, passion instead of foolery, finds no home in this trivial world of ours.
From Steppenwolf
When I read that quote, I copied it immediately and told myself it would be the opening quote in my NPC book. The quote resonated with me deeply, its words ringing in my ears like a call to adventure to see what this book was about, so one day I went to the public library and borrowed it.
This week, I finished reading Steppenwolf, and this is my reflection.
Toward the end of the story, Mozart tells Harry (the main character) the following:
It is time to come to your senses. You are to live and to learn to laugh. You are to learn to listen to the cursed radio music of life and to reverence the spirit behind it and to laugh at its distortions.
From Steppenwolf
What a line. In a way, that’s what the book is about, and that’s the book’s message.
I read this, and it makes me want to reflect inward because that has been the story of my life since I started college.
Ever since I set foot on my college campus, I gradually transformed into a Steppenwolf-like figure, shunning the noise and chaos of college life for a deeper connection to art, creativity, and meaning. Just like the Steppenwolf preferred Mozart over the noise, you would hear at a random gathering. I was the same, I prefer thinking about more extraordinary ideas than just the everydayness of life. This Steppenwolf-like attitude is reflected in much of my writing about college.
But let’s go back to that quote because there is something profound and worth reflecting on. Learning to listen to the cursed radio music or, in my case, to see and venerate the everydayness of life on a college campus is a crucial takeaway from this book.
I found myself becoming more and more like the Steppenwolf, a lone wolf in a sea of noise, searching for the beauty and meaning in life.
Why?
I didn’t know how to listen to the cursed radio music of life.
I didn’t know how to reverence the spirit behind it.
And most importantly, I didn’t know how to laugh at its distortions.
This is my third year in college and besides the facade of learning. The most profound impact has been my newfound awareness and understanding of the darker aspects of college life, from drinking and hookup culture to drugs and everything else that happens in a college town.
I have made earnest attempts to challenge and improve the culture around me, encouraging others to strive for a higher level of consciousness and meaning. Or even seeking to detach and isolate oneself from it, as some philosophers and thinkers have done in the past such as going to live in a mountain like Nietzsche or going to live in the “woods” like Henry David Thoreau.
After reading the Steppenwolf, I realized I didn’t know how to revere the spirit behind it and didn’t know how to laugh.
Is the answer to go and live a life full of pleasure? Or is the answer to becoming a Steppenwolf who is too smart to engage but also too dumb to reverence and thus suffer a great deal and want to die, which is what happens to Harry?
A similar approach to the latter is to whine, write essays as I did, complain, and not laugh about it. Not laughing, or even better, the lack of laughing, is the root of all diseases. I must learn to find humor and levity in even the darkest of situations.
So let’s learn how to laugh. What am I waiting for?
How can I learn to laugh and even reverence those spirits?
I must learn to listen to the cursed radio music of life. I must not judge but listen carefully. To pay attention and to notice. To find out that which I don’t know about yet. I will put aside my impulse to immediately come up with solutions, and instead, I will take the time to truly listen, understand and appreciate the complexity of the issues at hand. I will make a conscious effort to tune into the oftentimes chaotic and discordant rhythms of life, not with judgment but with an open heart, a desire to understand and appreciate the beauty within them.
I must learn to reason less and find out more. I am determined to adopt a more open-minded approach, listening more and reasoning less, and seeking deeper understanding rather than quick solutions. As I continue to grow and learn, I will make it a lifelong endeavor to maintain an open mind, actively listen and strive for greater understanding in all aspects of my life. while understanding and reverencing the spirit behind that which annoys me or that I don’t quite understand, so I can laugh about it but laugh at myself.
After learning to listen, the next step is to reverence the spirit behind it. Respect, understand, and do not negate or deny in whatever way because whatever you deny submits you, and whatever submits you is your master. It’s similar to the banning of books. Once the book is banned, attention is brought to it. Just leave the damn book alone. It doesn’t mean to bring the book to your house but just let it be.
Let it be, my friends. Let more people be, and once you see that. The third and final step comes in. Laughter! Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahah. That could seem like a maniac laugh, but it’s the laughter after a deep understanding and sincere respect for whatever spirit it’s coming from. This same laughter is the same that lets you see the mirror of yourself in front of yourself so you can laugh and laugh over and over again, wildly laughing at yourself.
Just laugh. “It’s not that deep,” said the average Gen Z. It’s true nothing is that deep, not even infinity.
Laugh about how everything is and learn to live with it, to live happily and have a great life laughing about it. Laughter is the cure for the future.
Don’t get so tense. You don’t need to become a part of it, but you can pay attention, understand, and laugh.
Listen to this, “HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.”
You probably think it’s the laughter of a crazy person, but you are not quite right, my friend, because, in a world of crazy people, the sane ones are “crazy.”
And yeah, they learn how to laugh like crazy people.
See you next week,
Juan David Campolargo