Monday, February 18, 2013

Teddy: Defining Happiness


Authors Note: This is actually my second attempt at writing a response to the short story "'Teddy" by J.D. Salinger.  My first attempt didn't go over to well because I jumped right into it too quickly, and when reading a higher level story like this I needed more time to process my thoughts and really develop my thesis. There were so many approaches to look at this story from, and it covered many topics that I wanted to talk about, that is why it took me longer to put my thoughts together. Once I had a clearer idea and I narrowed my focus, I wrote this response and scraped my first one; although that wasn't my original intention. In this piece I talk about our selfish nature and how we look to the wrong things to find satisfaction. I tried to use a lot of text evidence to back my ideas.

Self-righteous, self-seeking, selfish -- we stand on our pedestals, looking down upon our narrow world.  We build ourselves up for praise, and please others to please ourselves. We are naturally selfish people. Our hearts desire for more, our eyes cast shadows of greed. Happiness, contentment, and peace are fleeting from our grasp.  As human beings, we naturally seek ourselves first because we desire satisfaction, but it is our selfishness that actually blocks us from this.

Desire, greed, and lust are things many people struggle with. For without these what would temptation be but just a word, what would drive lots of our motives? We meet an interesting character in the short story "Teddy", the ten year old boy who proposes the idea that we do not need these emotions at all, but maybe we need other emotions to control our motives, and to ultimately produce pleasure in our lives.

"'I wish I knew why people think it's so important to be emotional,' Teddy said. ‘My mother and father don't think a person's human unless he thinks a lot of things are very sad or very annoying or very-very unjust, sort of. My father gets very emotional even when he reads the newspaper. He thinks I'm inhuman.'" Teddy only mentions emotions that make us unhappy in this quote; he never says anything about emotions that do make us happy.  This is because Teddy is trying to say that we seek pleasure from many worldly desires, and in order to feel satisfied we look to what other people have to say about life. We constantly try to adorn ourselves with new gadgets and garments to fit in and conform in order to maybe find some contentment. But Teddy gives us yet another example of our false motives; he shows us that we do not need outward beauty to be happy. 

"He was wearing extremely dirty, white ankle-sneakers, no socks, seersucker shorts that were both too long for him and at least a size too large in the seat, an overly laundered t-shirt that had a hole the size of a dime in the right shoulder, and an incongruously handsome, black alligator belt." Teddy clearly didn’t pay attention to outward appearance nor did he judge others on their looks; he searched deeper. He didn't waste his time fooling with false images; he cared about living for higher purposes. Teddy focused on who he was as a person, rather than what others saw in him. I'm not saying we should not look presentable by all means, but I'm saying that happiness dwells deep within someone, not merely on the surface. When we discover who we are inwardly, then our outward actions and appearances will reflect that.

To unlock this inner peace, we must start at the source of satisfaction somewhere beyond our conventional approaches to life. The hardest question in life is asking who you are, but once we have this answered we will not focus on pleasing ourselves because we will not be searching for more approval. The generic answers to this question are things dealing with age, gender, race, and professions, but these are conventional and the logical approaches to this question. “‘You asked me how I get out of the finite dimensions when I feel like it. I certainly don't use logic when I do it. Logic's the first thing you have to get rid of.' "

Teddy's father's had never asked himself this question, nor did look beyond the surface of everything; he lived more of a superficial life. He prided himself with his loud voice, and he selfishly used his gift whenever he could to seek praise from others. "Mr. McArdle played leading roles on no fewer than three daytime radio serials when he was in New York, and he had what might be called a third-class leading man's speaking voice: narcissistically deep and resonant, functionally prepared at a moment's notice to outmale anyone in the same room with it, if necessary even a small boy." When we look for outward approval to drive our sense of emotional contentment, we can get addicted to it, and live each day only looking for compliments to fill ourselves up. It can become like a drug that invades and takes over our lives.

When we get caught up in the busyness of the world and the false signs telling us that we need to look a certain way to be happy, we can lose sight of the person we want to be. Logically, we desire to listen to what others have to tell us about life, but it is when we find our true self that we can find joy and pleasure. We will only feel completely rested when we give up our worldly motives and live beyond the surface. We will never be content if we are not happy about whom we are inside.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Serendipity: Unconscious Experiments


Author's Note: This is a research paper on inventions created by accident. Originally it was just all pure research, but as I was studying this topic I began to see a trend in the inventions I was looking at, and I even began to question if inventions can even be accidental.  Throughout this paper I am trying to convey the message that often so called discoveries from mistakes are nothing more than an unexpected  product of hard work. I use three different examples to support my thesis. I am also working on properly citing my sources in this research paper while having a professional voice.

Throughout history when can see a trend of inventions that were discovered through our mistakes. We even have a word to describe these unfortunate events leading up to million dollar discoveries: serendipity ("INVENTORS BY ACCIDENT | Modern Mechanix "). In order for our world to advance we have to find new things, and often when we do this we call it serendipity because we were not expecting what we found. Though most people believe that many life changing inventions were complete mistakes, perhaps they are nothing more than experiments with unexpected results. In the area of science, we are all taught at a young age how to experiment, and throughout life we do it without even knowing. Though certain inventions are classified as accidental, they are just the results of unconscious experiments.

A common kitchen appliance that we might take for granted was actually the product of what history has defined as an accident. In 1945, Percy Spencer, the inventor of the microwave, became one of the first employees of the Raytheon Company in Lexington, Massachusetts. His intense work ethic and exposure to brilliant M. I. T. students lead him to working and doing research for this company 7 days a week ("Accidental Invention of the Microwave Oven"). One day while he was experimenting with a new vacuum tube called a magnetron, he noticed that a candy bar in his pocket began to melt, so he  tried putting popcorn kernels near the vacuum and they popped. Using this technology Spencer built the first microwave in 1947 that weighted 750 pounds, was 5 1/2 feet tall, and cost $5,000. When it was introduced to homes in 1950, it wasn't very popular at first until a countertop version was produced in 1967 which was much more practical and was sold at a lower price ("9 Things Invented or Discovered by Accident").  Though Spencer never imaged that he would find this new technology, it was through his continual perseverance that the microwave was developed.

Almost thirty years after the microwave, another simplistic yet memorable invention was discovered. In 1974, Arthur Fry created the first sticky note as a bookmark for a hymnal while he was singing in the church choir. Previously, Spencer Silver, an employee of the 3M Company had come across a new type of adhesive that Fry later used in his invention ("9 Things Invented or Discovered by Accident"). The adhesive was weaker than all the other glues; it stuck to objects, but could be easily pulled off without leaving a mark. It was about three years later when Fry found a use for the adhesive and decided to sell it ("Post-it Note History - Invention of Post-it Notes"). When the product was originally introduced to the market as the Post-it Note -- thin sheets of paper with a slight amount of adhesive on it -- most companies did not believe it would succeed. Much like the Microwave though, Post-it Notes surpassed all predictions, and since 1980 the name has traveled across the world ("9 Things Invented or Discovered by Accident"). Again, these two friends, playing off of each others inventions, developed a completely new product.

Long before Microwaves or Post-it Notes, a favorite American snack was invented. In 1853, Chef George Crum in Saratoga Springs, New York was serving fried potatoes to his customers. The people were constantly complaining about how the potatoes were not crunchy, and the chef became fed up and decided to experiment on new recipes. He thinly sliced the potatoes and fried them in boiling grease to  make them crunchier. It turned out to be something that the customers loved and everyone called them Saratoga Chips ("9 Things Invented or Discovered by Accident"). Crum hadn't planned for the thin potato slices to turn into what we know now as potato chips, he was just curiously experimenting with new recipes .

Though all of these inventions were considered to be accidental, they didn't come from nothing. Something cannot possibly come from nothing, nor can an invention be discovered without thought or work. In all of the examples of so called accidental inventions, none of the ideas simply came out of the blue. The inventors all had a problem they wanted to solve and they were all hard workers. It was just certain situations that were perhaps not planned to produce the results they got. Though serendipity may exist, it is nothing more than what we call research. All modern science has been developed from experiments, which is just the act of testing new things and conducting research. Sometimes we do not realized that we are experimenting and that is when we pronounce our findings to be from serendipity, but truly accidental discoveries are really just everyday discoveries.


Works Cited

"7 scientific accidents that led to world-changing discoveries." io9. We come from the future.. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Jan. 2013. <http://io9.com/5739235/7-scientific-accidents-that-led-to-world+changing-discoveries>.
"9 Things Invented or Discovered by Accident." How Stuff Works. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Jan. 2012. <science.howstuffworks.com/innovation/scientific-experiments/9-things-invented-or-discovered-by-accident.htm >.
"Accidental Invention of the Microwave Oven." Vat19.com: Unique Gifts & Unusual Gift Ideas. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Jan. 2013. <http://www.vat19.com/brain-candy/accidental-inventions-microwave.cfm>.
"Coke: Top 10 Accidental Inventions: JUNKies: Science Channel." Science Channel : Science Channel. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Jan. 2013. <http://science.discovery.com/brink/top-ten/accidental-inventions/inventions-08.html>.
"INVENTORS BY ACCIDENT | Modern Mechanix ." Modern Mechanix | Yesterday's tomorrow, today.. N.p., n.d. Web. 8 Jan. 2013. <http://blog.modernmechanix.com/inventors-by-accident/>.
"Post-it Note History - Invention of Post-it Notes." The Great Idea Finder - Celebrating the Spirit of Innovation . N.p., n.d. Web. 7 Jan. 2013. <http://www.ideafinder.com/history/inventions/postit.htm>.