eccentrics
in training
by rose sierra
Florence
Foster Jenkins sang wildly out of tune, but it never stopped her from
becoming an opera diva. Nor did it prevent people from flocking to her
turn-of-the-century performances, including private recitals at the
Ritz Carlton Hotel in New York City for which she designed ornate costumes,
at least three for every performance, including the Angel of Inspiration,
resplendent with full feathered wings.
Her
lack of talent combined with her enthusiasm and extravagance was her
glory. Tickets for her recitals were harder to come by than a
box at the Met on Caruso night, as David Weeks describes in his
book, Eccentrics: A Study of Sanity and Strangeness. Her operatic career
culminated in selling out Carnegie Hall at the age of 76. She died a
month later.
Jenkins
wrote her own epitaph: Some people say I cannot sing, but no one
can say I did not sing.
There
are people like Florence who have managed to retain their individuality
in a rigid world, people who have not stuffed themselves into the tightly
restrictive harness prescribed for us by our culture and families. Some
of these people we call eccentrics. Eccentrics have a reputation for
being unhinged, but actually, they are often more courageous than the
rest of us, and have something valuable to teach. Two predominant traits
of eccentrics are that they dont give a damn what others think
and they have an unwavering belief in themselves. They are willing to
let their strangeness show and even amplify it. In the field of astronomy,
eccentric means deviating from a circular form. These undaunted oddballs
can inspire us to break out of whatever circles have been drawn around
us, or that we have drawn around ourselves.
Dr.
Weeks says, I think that we are all stranger than we think we
are, and we try to control that, because were scared of what well
find in there. What we find may jostle a lifetime of habits and
relationships. It may require us to re-examine decisions and take risks.
It may cause us to be ridiculed or not liked by others. But the reward
we get from easing that control is the liberating experience of a life
fully lived, and the relief we feel when we let ourselves out of the
bag.
I knew
a man who failing as a farmer
Burned down his farmhouse for the fire insurance
and spent the proceeds on a telescope
to satisfy a lifelong curiosity
about our place among the infinities
Robert
Frost
We
often wait for our farms to fail rather than burning them down ourselves,
unwilling to take the risk to be who we really are. Some people find
it easier to break out and be themselves than others. Some people spend
an entire lifetime holding themselves back or living someone elses
dream. The farmer in Frosts poem initially didnt believe
it was possible to spend his time pondering stars. Its too risky
for most people to even consider following their passions. What would
the neighbors say about the farmer turned astronomer? Probably that
he was a farmer turned lunatic.
Lily
Tomlins character Trudy, an eccentric bag lady in the play The
Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, says it well:
I never could have done stuff like that when I was in my right
mind. Id be worried people would think I was crazy. When I think
of the fun I missed, I try not to be bitter. How much fun and
passion do we miss because we are afraid of, and therefore confined
by, what others may think of us? How much does the fear of being the
outcast bag lady or the lunatic farmer keep us from taking risks to
be ourselves?
We
try to please those around us, even when theyre not around us
any longer. Other peoples voices become internalized, and keep
us from acting spontaneously, originally, creatively. If were
living our lives imagining what others want from us, where is our real
life? Life becomes a phantom of itself. This is whats crazy. Trudy
goes on: I made some studies, and reality is the leading cause
of stress among those in touch with it. I can take it in small doses,
but as a lifestyle I found it too confining.
Dr. Weeks found that eccentrics were healthier and happier than the
rest of us, and attributes this to the fact that because they dont
feel the need to conform, they experience lower levels of stress, which
causes their immune systems to function more efficiently, and they are
therefore healthier. And when people are doing what they want to do,
without worrying too much about social repercussions, they are more
joyful.
The
point is not to emulate eccentrics just for the sake of being different.
If you dont feel a genuine calling to sing opera, it becomes an
empty gesture, a sham. Whatever you do must come from a true place within.
Its about being brave enough to reveal your particular authentic
self. Eccentricity is a continuum. On one end is Florence Jenkins, on
the other is a person screwing up the courage to ask a waiter to return
the cold fettuccini. Both matter.
You
may consider practicing your own strangeness in small steps,
remembering that what is a small step for one person may be an enormous
one for another.
Dare to do silly things suggests author Ray Bradbury. Wear
risqué underwear to your next business meeting. Thinking about
your underwear may inspire a subversive smile on your face that may
lead to your next creative act. Sprinkle chocolate on your mashed potatoes,
walk around backwards for a day, decorate your car with streamers and
balloons, surprise someone with a birthday party when its not
their birthday, put up Christmas lights in your living room in July.
You
can use these things to prime the pump and coax out your unconventional
self, which may give you the courage to step out of your prescribed
circle, making more substantial changes, like executing a course correction
in your career, bringing more honesty into your relationships, letting
go of old patterns that no longer serve you, launching a new venture
or simply spinning out of the orbit of other peoples expectations.
Rose Sierra
is the founder and facilitator of Creative Awareness Process, which
evokes your natural creativity, opens you to fresh and original perspectives
about yourself and the world around you, while giving you the skills
to work effectively with lifes challenges through dialogue, art-making,
movement and meditation. Rose offers private sessions and workshops.
[ 828-299-7199; rsierra@rsierra.net;
rsierra.net ]