Thursday, August 01, 2013

"It's not fair" - no, it's called life

Lately I've heard this phrase a couple of times (as have I thought it). "It's not fair". Like many of the fairy tales* I read when I grew up, as in "the person was doing it all well and therefore got rewarded with marrying the princess and lived happily ever after". Or a random Disney story* of the more gruesome fairy tales I read (if you have time and interest, look into 'The little Mermaid' and 'Hunchback of Notre Dame' if you want more back story that the originals weren't all that cute, nor did they end well.)

Anyway, I've heard many a post-doc telling me about their post-doc experience and ending with "they worked hard and pulled lots of hours but still someone else won the affection of the PI and they weren't rewarded with the paper/TTposition/what have you" and 'it wasn't fair'. I'm trying so hard not to fall into the pit of cynicism and replying "of course it isn't fair, it's post-docing".

And then there are the examples of my friends and others with their relationships and their failure (of the relationship) and their new ones that didn't turn out they way they've hoped... "It isn't fair, I met them after the divorce and we talked about x,y and z but now they've changed their mind and we don't have a future together". And they look at me like I would have something good to say about it all.

The truth to this is that I don't buy into the saying that "whatever happens to you it's either how you let it define you, how it hurts you and how you make it afterwards". I think that it is a pretty simplistic view of life and not true. The same way I don't buy into the idea that "some people only get bad things". Even though it would be easy to say that to certain people, 'things' that happen never seem to grow into 'catastrophies' to these people but rather into opportunities and they never see the really bad outcomes.

For most of us though, I think it is partly a matter of "missing the good parts of life and therefore making it all about the bad parts" (i.e. focusing on the failure/bad parts). Mind you, I am writing this as someone who has a pretty splotchy family history where people aren't 'happy' and end up in 'happily ever after land'. Nor have I had the most sunshiny story of life - according to comparison to certain people - nor myself on certain days, but to me in general it's still pretty good. (Compared to the rest of the world - WHO - looking at health, income, crime and such, I'm doing pretty swell.)

I guess what I am trying to say in this fairly rambling blog post is that most likely life doesn't turn out the way your 10year-self thinks it would (if it did - congrats to you! I really mean it, nothing ironic about it) but that doesn't mean "it" isn't fair, nor that it a complete shambles. It mainly means that we as people can't  expect that life turns out they way we thought it would and that it isn't as easy as we perceived it might be but still, the idea to talk about "it's not fair" means that you might be stuck in a thought process that isn't really reality. (I know, I'm trying to convince myself as much as anyone here.)

Reality is shambles, it's opportunity, it's reacting, it's taking chances, it's giving up things you didn't know at the time you cared about or not, but most of all - it's about enjoying those moments of tranquility and happiness that you do have when it feels like the stairs align and all is good. Because none of it is a guarantee that it will last a longer time. And when other times happens, it's not because you necessarily did something wrong, but "it' happens, it's life" (i.e. sickness like cancer or accidental death or what have you).

It's like a old woman I sat with in the hospice care - she said to me when she had her lucid moments before she died -  "life is all those moments of happiness when you didn't have to face the real stuff falling down on you and making it hard. The joy of those moments are the ones I dwell on, not the bad moments when things happened to me or the people I loved, since that is what happens. That is life and the only things that matters in the end is the happy times, the people who love you, and what/how you acted in those times of crisis when things were on the line" It's hard for me to write it with the importance and the impetus she said it with, being over 80 years old and having lived a life fully and trying to pass it on to me.

Then again, I still remember the man I met as a 15 year old at a bus stop. He told me he was contemplating suicide since his wife of more than 50 years had died a few weeks earlier. He was guilt ridden about the fact that he had asked her to make an abortion in the 1950ies when they were not married, subsequently she couldn't have children (i.e. they couldn't have children) and now all their friends were dead too since he was old and they had died before him and there was no one left with him (since they have had no children). I mumbled something about "the Lord moves in mysterious ways" since I had no other answer. I wanted to tell him - at the time as a teen - that suicide wasn't the answer. Now? I don't know what I'd say since he seemed pretty cohesive when I think about it, and life isn't easy.

In the end of this, by no means great nor perfect blog post, is that "it's not fair" is a fairly** useless phrase to use since "of course it's not fair, nothing is 'fair', but you have to see the good things in what you get and live with those moments" since in the end, those good moments are the times you should remember and cherish. We just try to do the best of what we're dealt with and for many that is a pretty  good deal. I guess I might be subjective, gone through a few of those "less than perfect instances" but I really believe - I have to believe - that life in general is not fair, but that doesn't mean it can't be good in places where we don't always look for the happy.



When I'm rereading this post I wonder if I should delete it since it shines with so much hope and other fringe stuff that it might not be worth reading? I'll leave it for a while since it is pretty honest if nothing else and maybe someone will feel that I am touching on something worth mentioning.

*both these references could be exchanged to "Job" since "it wasn't fair either" what God did to him.... if you want more of a biblical reference. Or "Abraham" if you go for the 'you need to sacrifice your child to make it right' in order to reap the benefits... 'fair' seems like a pretty far fetched deal at that time. Tig Notaro comes to mind when you talk about that, her stand up section on "God never gives you more than you can handle" gig last summer, which is pretty funny even though it's dealing with very awful stuff happening at the same time.

**fairly makes me think of fairy tales so "pretty" would maybe been a better word in context

11 comments:

Alyssa said...

I think it's important that life isn't fair --- that's where we learn the most. And we'd be pretty boring people if we got what we wanted all the time (and sometimes we don't really know what we want/need anyway!).

Amanda@Lady Scientist said...

I really believe - I have to believe - that life in general is not fair, but that doesn't mean it can't be good in places where we don't always look for the happy.

I like this thought. Life isn't fair. It's just not, but sometimes there's good even in bad places.

chall said...

Thank you both for the comments.

Glad to see I'm not the only one contemplating this "fair" thing.

Alyssa; that's so true. Many a time it's a "i don't want this" knee just reaction but not sure what you want instead ^^

Amanda: It's important, I think, to see the good times when they happen and focus more on the positives in other times (not always easy of course)

Psycgirl said...

This has been on my mind a lot lately - both as I navigate a challenging time of my own and as I try to mentor students who expect nothing but good things to come their way, or expect me to treat everyone exactly the same, regardless of their individual strengths and weaknesses

chall said...

"expect me to treat everyone exactly the same, " - yeah, I can see that this might get me. I know that "fair" means different things to different people but I've seen lately a lot of "treated the same if that means I'm at an advantage. treated/given similar treatments based on individual strenghts if I'm the underdog..."

It's har dwhen it is yourself and the challenges.. so easy to compare to others and forget that nothing is really fair and that there are a lot of other things that factor in that you usually never see... so in reality it's impossible to know what fair means.

The bean-mom said...


Have you every seen the movie "The Labyrinth"? It was a cult '80s film starring David Bowie. At one point the heroine of the story, Sarah, exclaims, "That's not fair!" And Bowie, playing the wicked Goblin King, answers her, "You keep saying that. I wonder what your basis for comparison is."

I like your own quote, "... of course it's not fair, it's post-docing." =)

Lots of wisdom here, chall. I love your story about what that old woman said to you at the end of her life. She seemed very wise; and whether or not her life was "fair", I suspect it was good.

chall said...

THank you bean-mom. I've seen labyrinth, didn't remember the instance you talk about but now I do ;) Liked Bowie in the movie.

And yes, the old woman was telling me that her life thad been good - once she continued to focus on the good parts and not too much dwelling on the "unfair/bad" parts. She did talk about the importance of being happy and trying to make the best out of situations, among other things. All in all, I hope to be a happy (content) 80year old... so far as a 30something, not as sure....

Dr. Dad, PhD said...

Funny - last week I was trying to figure out a way to teach this lesson to my 7 year old, without it becoming a lesson in futility.

I think one of life's most important lessons is to realize that bad things happen to good people. And good things happen to bad people. The events don't make a person good or bad, they are just snapshots in time....

I never really came to a good conclusion (same as this post...) other hat to say that sometimes you have to accept the events that happen in your life and just move on. Still looking for s better "moral."

chall said...

Dr Dad: it's a tough balance that one... think it depends on the age like you allude to. You don't want to scare a child into thinking too much about the hardship of trying (even if 'trying' is a lot of life).

It's sometimes easier to see the 'moral' of the story when you have the faith concept to work on e.g. "life isn't all about what you see right now but the 'other' stuff collecting in the background and leading to a sum of good in the end" but for many that's not enough. (I'm trying to see it that way since I know that in the short term the 'immoral' way might win out.).

I like the "snapshots in time" analogy since it is very true. I might hope that "in the end" the people who choose the easy way aren't getting the best deal in the end but....well... that's where the 'right now or what I can see' makes it hard.

So far, all I'm stuck with is that the 'other way' makes me think too much and not enjoy the perks but the 'right' way makes me feel like a good person and at least clean. Not the best, not the easy but the only way I can do it for the moment....

sorry about not being more eloquent ^^

Nina said...

Wow, great post! Just realised I'm missing all sorts of posts since reader is gone and I'm not blogging myself anymore.
Anyway, I detest the "life isn't fair" kind of people who blame "life" and others for things. Life is in your own hands. REcently I was thinking of an old friend who used to say to me "you have everything, you finished uni, you have a boyfriend, you're moving abroad, you're so lucky". As in, he didn't have all these things and thought it had to do with luck. Which is does to some extend, but then again, I studied hard, I pulled through even when I didn't want to, I broke up with that boyfriend, I moved abroad again, and everytime I feel homesick. In conclusion: I think you need to work for your luck and also just see things on the bright side ...
Well. Keep writing posts like this, it's good to give such things thought.

chall said...

Nina: thanks for the compliments! And yes, I think it is a little about mind frame (I'm working on mine atm..... it's not easy but sitting down and saying "it's not fair" doesn't really help either... Good luck w moves and all. I miss your blog.