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Don’t Just Do Something, Sit There
Turning Old Clichés to New Maxims
By Richard Eyre
Some of the catchy little sayings, proverbs, or little notions
of traditional wisdom that people (and society) have been repeating
to us over the years don’t work anymore. In fact, they aren’t
true anymore. In fact, they’ve become part of the problem, rather
than part of any solution. And they’re not just cute little clichés
or harmless, old-fashioned platitudes. No! They have worked
their way into our subconscious and influenced our attitudes.
They often prompt unrealistic expectations, turn us into dissatisfied perfectionists, or give us inaccurate perceptions
of the world around us.
They
also produce stress.
Some
of these old clichés or accepted bits of “wisdom” never were any
good – never were accurate and never worked. Others were fine
once but simply don’t fit with today. This column will seek to
expose a few of the old clichés for what they are – outdated
philosophies or inaccurate insights posing as wisdom. Then it
replaces the used-up notions with some updated maxims – little
statements that reflect our world as it really is, and our lifestyles
as they really ought to be.
Cliché: An old piece of hackneyed or stereotyped “wisdom” which
has become trite and meaningless. Taken from
the French clicher, which refers to printing from a metal plate
which clamps down and repeatedly produces a stereotyped image.
Maxim: A useful and practical catchphrase which states a
current truth in a way that gives insight and has a beneficial
influence on how we see things and how we do things. Taken
from the Latin maxima proposition, which means “greatest
statement” or a sound general truth.
So
we’ll take a cliché like, “Don’t just sit there, do something,”
and turn it around into a maxim that works in today’s
over-programmed, stressed out world. “Don’t just do something,
sit there.”
A
Tough Challenge
It’s
not easy to challenge some of the best-known and oft-quoted clichés
in the world – sayings that frequently seem to carry within them
a wisdom of the ages. It’s difficult,
and often unpopular, to disagree with any “traditional wisdom”
– with notions or ideas that have become part of our collective
way of thinking.
And
it’s downright dangerous to take on your mother-in-law, your college
professor, your own father, and the time-management experts of
the world – all at once.
But
with due respect to them all, that’s what this column will do.
Just as we can learn a lot about a particular time by studying
its arts or its fashion, we can learn about ourselves by thinking
about the clichés – the traditional and accepted wisdom – the
most of us grew up with. And we can appreciate how fast our world
is changing by realizing how much alteration some of these
clichés need in order to serve us well in today’s world.
Remodeling
Old Sayings to Fit Today
I
don’t actually have anything personal against the old clichés.
There’s nothing inherently wrong with most of them. Many of them
were once practical and wise – just as the people who coined them
– just as the people who used them. (See ...I really
don’t want to argue with my mother-in-law.)
You
see, it’s not these sayings or those people who have changed.
It’s the times and the circumstances in which we
live.
Some
of the old clichés simply fit better (and worked better)
in an older time.
Please don’t think that I’m suggesting or advocating a changing
morality. Right and wrong do not change. There
are values that are both universal and eternal. But circumstances
and situations and options do change. And the world has
never known a time when they were changing faster!
In
days gone by, life was simpler, and so was wisdom. Separating
everything into “things worth doing well” and “things not worth
doing it all” worked better in a time with fewer options, fewer
demands. Laziness was differently defined in a day when work
was physical and “doing something” was always better than “sitting
there.” And the rule of “work before play” was perfectly practical
when cows needed milking or work required daylight.
Today,
in our stressful and complex lives, play sometimes needs prioritizing
over work – and frequently the most productive thing we can do
is “sit there” – and there are a great many things that are worth
doing, but just barely!
What
we need in our new and more flexible world is a different set
of paradigms – different ways of looking at life, and at the art
of living it – fresh maxims to live by.
It’s
the Attitude
We
work a lot today on our techniques – on the methods by
which we do things and on the tools and technology we use. “Improvement”
is often thought of as a better invention, and “progress” as a
better procedure. But real growth, real improvement, and real
progress only happen when attitudes change, when we learn
to change how we look at our situations and how we think
about our lives.
It
is our attitudes that control what we see from day to day, what
we put into our lives, and what we get out of them. And our attitudes
are formed, to a rather amazing extent, by the little proverbs
and platitudes that we accept as “truth.” These columns, then,
are about changing our minds, changing how we think
and changing what we think of as “wisdom.”
Each
of the columns that will appear here (one each fortnight) is titled
and begun with the old cliché and then concluded with the
new maxim. In most cases I think you will find
that the old saying prompts feelings of worry or guilt, while
the new one frees and energizes. I’ve been rather personal (maybe
dangerously so) in attributing the old clichés to the people in
my own life who used them on me, and I’ve tried to explain my
own changing attitudes through personal experiences that I hope
parallel your own.
So
...with advance
acknowledgments and peace offerings to moms, dads, teachers, coaches,
employers, advisers, bumper stickers, and all of yesterday’s clichés,
let’s look for some new sayings that help us make sense of today
and maybe (for a little while) of tomorrow. Join me here every
two weeks!
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Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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