Day: June 21, 2002

  • Today, the Summer Solstice, is the singular day of the year noted for the most daylight and the least night.  This solstice (for there are two—summer and winter) is an astronomical event when the Sun reaches the Tropic of Cancer (or astrologically speaking, enters the sign of Cancer) which may vary slightly year to year due to the Earth’s general precession.   Throughout much of European history, due to lack of precision about the nuances of the precession, the Summer Solstice was traditionally celebrated beginning the eve of June 23rd (Midsummer’s Night) and ending at sunset of the 24th.   The eve of this day, also the feast day of John the Baptist, was commonly known as St. John’s Eve.


    The young maid stole through the cottage door,
    And blushed as she sought the Plant of power:
    “Thou silver glow-worm, O lend me thy light,
     I must gather the mystic St. John's wort tonight,
    The wonderful herb, whose leaf will decide
    If the coming year shall make me a bride. “


    And the glow-worm came
    With its silvery flame,
    And sparked and shone
    Through the night of St. John,
    And soon has the young maid her love-knot tied.


    But why was this eve “Midsummer” for Shakespeare (A Midsummer Night's Dream)?  Are we not told by the popular press that the Summer Solstice marks the beginning of summer that will end upon the arrival of the Fall equinox (variable also—this year Sep 23rd) ? 


    Well pagans, being historically prior, first designated this solstice for celebration. According to older folk and pagan calendars, Summer actually begins on May Day (1st ) and ends on August 1st, with the Summer Solstice, imprecisely “middling” between those dates.  So even though the common folk and lesser pagans were somewhat inexact about the occurrence of the Summer Solstice (fixing it on the 24th instead of variable) and the midpoint between (which would be around June 15th), nonetheless, Shakespeare immortalized it as day of nuptial festivities, possibly “nothing but a dream” (Puck),  when following a comedy of confused matchmaking, happy newlyweds troop off to honey their beds.


    Now check this out:  Traditionally, Druids and other pagans have sojourned to Stonehenge in Britain on the Summer Solstice to witness the precise alignment of the stones with the sun’s rise on this day.  But America, too, has a “Henge”  – Carhenge!!  Located on the Nebraska plains, it is a direct copy of Stonehenge even with the height and width of the cars matching the original stones!



    Of course, being America, Carhenge doesn’t only line up with actual sun on the solstice but also with the car-corporate Sun...



    Okay, all you pagan solstice-worshipping car-owners, now line up, fill up, and race your engines!

  • 'Forget all the rules. Forget about being published.
    Write for yourself and celebrate writing.'



    Melinda
    Haynes

  • The optimist, it's been said, sees the doughnut where the pessimist sees only the hole. Psychologists are nearly unanimous in recommending that you keep your eye on the doughnut.



    But now two researchers are suggesting that for some people, a little pessimism may be a good thing. According to Julie K. Norem and psychologist Nancy Cantor, these people are able to use "defensive pessimism" to prevent the prospect of failure from immobilizing them. . . . The researchers conclude that when well-intentioned people reassure pessimists that everything will be fine, they may not be doing them a favor. Defensive pessimists may need to play their little cognitive trick on themselves in order to do well. The best way for them to get the doughnut may be to prepare for the possibility of getting only the hole.


    —Carol Wade, "The power of negative thinking," Psychology Today, May 1987


    I see the hole.  I want the hole.  I hear them scream "Don't go!  Don't go!"  But I charge head on, I won't go slow, I want control.  Whole control.  Total hole. 


    Defensive pessimism can be reduced to a three-step mental rehearsal. First, approach the anxiety-producing task with lowered expectations, certain that it will go badly. (Take, for example, public speaking, a common fear: commit yourself to the idea that your next speech will be a disaster.) Then, imagine in detail all the ways in which it will go awry. (You will lose your notes at the 11th hour, you will trip on the way to the podium, you will be pilloried by your colleagues.) Finally, map out ways to avert each catastrophe.


    For strategic optimists, the sorts of people who like to psych themselves up for a challenge, this routine would produce more anxiety, not less. But for anxious people, Norem's findings show that this unusual method can offer a sense of control, however limited, over uncomfortable circumstances.

    —David Rakoff, "The Year in Ideas," The New York Times Magazine, December 9, 2001

    Can you imagine if you had a date who was a defensive pessimist?  His/her first suspicion would be that you're going to break the date and a lot of energy would be spent preparing for that.  If the date did come off, he/she would certainly be anticipating a rough, joyless time filled with embarassing revelations, no kiss goodnite, and no followup contact.  If by some stretch of the imagination, you all ended on on third base, he/she would be sure of getting thrown out at the plate--anything else would violate the expectation of anti-climax.  OK, so let's say you discover beforehand that this date is a "defensive pessimist" with all these negative expectations.  Aren't you more likely than not to cancel the date, allowing his/her negativity to become self-fulfilling from the start, rather than launch into a painful battle to establish a beachhead of fun?  Of course, it may depend upon how you feel about the person, but if it were an explorative first date with everything else being equal, wouldn't you just rather throw the personality-runt back into open waters and continue to fish for fun?


    So is "defensive pessimism" really a winning strategy for heretofore losers?  Or merely a manner for pessimists to organize their likely loss?

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