From idealist to realist: It ain’t real until it’s real.
I used to be a dreamer, a romantic, a person of ‘if only’ who believed the word ‘maybe’ held the promise of ‘yes’. Then I became an idealist, someone who developed the warriors visions of a better world or worlds, the way things should be, could be, with all the dogmatic passion of a rebel.Â
Then I became the realist, never getting over excited about possibilities for maybes were now only maybes and nothing was real until it was really really real and happening.
I don’t think I got old. I think I got grounded. On the bright side I never became a pessimist. As a realist the glass is neither half empty nor half full. The glass is exactly filled only to where it is. Whether it is by contrast, X, Y, or Z, who gives a damn. All that matters is if you want a drink there’s one there or there’s not.
Nor did I become a grumpy old woman just because I lost my romanticism, my idealism. I’ll skip and spin in the street with a fervour that might leave a five year old looking like a fifty year old soul.
And nor do I lack imagination or playfulness. Realism is a starting point for satire, for surrealism. You can twist it and bend it because you truly know what this thing is you’re handling. Realism is about looking life in the face. It’s about seeing what is there but also rarely presuming. It is about never building hopes and dreams on maybes but always looking at building hopes and dreams with you’re own grit and shit and doing so from things that are real, tangible and accessible.
Don’t give me flowers. I’ll take the pot plant. Hell, I’ll take the seeds and grow my own plant, my own flowers, then share them with you without cutting them off just to watch them die in smelly water on my window sill.
Donna Williams, Dip Ed, BA Hons.
Author, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter.
Autism consultant and public speaker.
http://www.myspace.com/nobodynowherethefilm
http://www.donnawilliams.net
http://www.aspinauts.com
I like the idea of the potplant. As well as being a metaphor, it’s very grounded in your childhood.
Grumpy old woman? Not likely. And the grit and shit is very earthy.
thanks comrade 🙂
I have always hated getting dead flowers to watch die. Thought I was the only one! I want to give sick people bits of Spanish ivy or some other sturdy bit of deadish stem that gets healthy along with them. I would be encouraged to see the plant coming back to life. I don’t know if I am a ‘realist’ yet-I expect to beat the odds. One more message I will not heed: I know my empty glass is half full. I am not ‘romantic’ either. Probably just stubborn. Keep up good representation of our kind of people. Thanks