Geddit.
(This is not about any
socially identifiable choice that governs people’s lives. This is a process of
thought through which I've chosen to analyze the parallels – or merely similarities –
between choice and the search for identity. Also, I am a woman, and speak as
such, with no pretext of neutrality.)
This is the trend in today’s ‘today’: Our search for identity is driving us to go against the grain;
to break the mould. As someone who is almost obsessed with the idea of identity
this fascinates me. It raises all sorts of interesting questions:
Who am I, really? Is the real me
hidden in the contradictions of culture? Is society the Matrix? Am I the opposite of what my mum
taught me to be; the antithesis of what my dad expects of me? Am I most myself
when I’m not what is expected? And on, and on.
Culture and the media appear to be wondering about the
matrix, too.
Fashion says, “Underwear on the inside of your clothes? Or
even, clothes that fit? How about a sheer skirt with a lining? (A lining?!
No one even speaks that way except your mother.) Rip it all out – let your
fashionable legs line themselves.”
Forget drag; fashion’s androgyny says to the woman, “You are
most yourself when you’re wearing a man’s hat and your boyfriend’s jeans.”
And now you’re on the streets of instagram, boldly your
selfest self, as you strut your stuff in an inside-out tee. Your mother’s worst
nightmare.
Journalism says, “What subject? What predicate? What are
these things? You are most yourself when you pour out words. Spontaneously. On
the page. All you need. There.”
“Don’t start a sentence with a conjunction? But uhm, you are
most yourself when you do just that.”
How about, no swearing in published work? “Fuck that. Shit, you’re
most yourself when you write whatever you bloody hell want.” *Clicks publish*
And television? I only assume I speak for Shonda Rhimes when
I say, “Marriage is just a general idea. Get married, have a mistress, kill
your husband – or your friend. (Actually, and
your friend.) Cheat your way into a job, lie to everyone around you and make
more money for it.” Who else is most themselves on Thursday night? (Friday in
Lagos. Holla!)
Religion? A lot of us grew up within some sort of
organised religion, so now, we are most ourselves when we reject religion. The
idea of a higher power? Most ourselves when we take the power for ourselves.
Career: I am most myself when I don't do any work, but make all the money. School: I am most myself when I don't even care about that archaic social construct and I'm not going to be a doctor okay, mom! Deal with it!
From Frozen,
teaching girls, “Who says you need a man to kiss you back to life?” – a commendable,
universally endorsed message – to Maleficent,
that says, “Ignore the fact that my very name means ‘evil’. I’m most myself
when ‘evil’ really means ‘justified in my actions’ and eventually, ‘good,’” I
allowed myself to wonder: how many of the decisions we take are driven simply
by a curious exploration of opposites? Are we losing something in the process
of embracing contradiction without boundaries? Are boundaries useful, or do
they merely stifle expression? What is the line between free expression and
harmful exploration?
In our search for who we are, we are easily – and, I
believe, only temporarily – satisfied by the exploration of opposites. I
believe that identity is internal, and that although it can be illuminated from
the outside – and definitely reflects outwardly – it really stems from the inside.
I believe that the “bad-is-good-and-bad-again” trend is a reflection of how
easily we tire of the transient thrill that jumping back and forth brings.
Perhaps what we are looking for so desperately is most
revealed when we stop trying so hard to reject the choices we are dissatisfied with;
when we stop eagerly embracing the contradictions of these choices, purely in
blind defiance.
Perhaps we are most ourselves when we accept that we are
enough, exactly as we are: sometimes uncertain and sometimes mistaken, but,
always, enough. Sufficient for contentment are our strengths and our
shortcomings – the full measure of these – and we do not need to try so hard to
prove ourselves to anyone.
This is a crazily beautiful piece Omotayo!!! I see you're getting some crazy inspiration :)
ReplyDeleteAhhhhhhh thank you!
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