Comparison Is the Mother of Misery

The mother of misery is comparison. In fourth grade I plunged into despair because I couldn’t draw like Joseph Schidelman, the illustrator of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. About the same time, baseball humbled me: my bat speed wasn’t in the same galaxy as Willie Mays, Dick Allen, or Henry Aaron. In my teenage bodybuilding years, I had muscles, but nothing like that of Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sergio Oliva, and Frank Zane; I wisely retired the fantasy of becoming Mr. Universe and managing a gym in the Bahamas. In college, as an aspiring intellectual, I flogged myself for lacking Vladimir Nabokov’s wit and velocity. My chances of becoming a famous novelist were equal to my odds of winning Mr. Olympia. Later, when I flirted with composing and singing, I heard Jeff Buckley’s soul pour through the speakers and realized my voice would mainly trigger a neighborhood dog-barking contest and a chorus of angry neighbors. Decades passed. My classroom persona faced a generation handcuffed to smartphones and ChatGPT. I scrambled for “edutainment” tricks to dodge irrelevance, but the gap widened no matter how I danced.

The sting doubled when I watched Earthquake (Nathaniel Stroman) flatten an audience with a preacher’s cadence and bulletproof wisdom. His special Joke Telling Business left me muttering, “If I had Earthquake’s power, I could resuscitate my teaching career and stroll into old age with a shred of dignity.”

Meanwhile, fresh incompetencies arrived like junk mail. I broke two Samsung TVs in one day. I failed to sync my new garage door opener to my phone. My wife had to rescue me from my own maladroit tech spiral. The result was predictable: I was condemned to the Shame Dungeon.

Down in the basement of depression, I noticed another casualty: my YouTube channel. I usually post once a week and have for over a decade—mostly about my obsession with diver watches. But as sanity demanded I stop flipping watches, I ran out of new divers to discuss. I tried pivoting—open with a little watch talk, then segue to a wry misadventure with a morsel of human insight. If I nailed the landing, I’d get a few thousand views and enough comment energy to believe the enterprise mattered.

But with my sixty-fourth birthday closing in, the doubts got loud. I don’t want to do “watch talk,” and I’m too mortified to perform a perky, self-deprecating monologue about my misalignment with the universe.

I keep hearing Mike Birbiglia in my head: you must process your material before you present it; the set has to be a gift, not your live catharsis. The healing happens before you step onstage. You speak from the far shore, not mid-drowning. Otherwise, you’re asking the audience to be your therapist.

So I’m stuck at a fork: Will this current fear and anxiety about age and disconnection pass through the refinery of my psyche and emerge as something worthy? Or will I remain in the Shame Dungeon, comparing myself to Earthquake, and decide that with talent like his prowling the earth, my best move is to hide under a rock?

Here’s the dilemma plain: Hiding isn’t viable; it starves the soul. But serving the world a plate of unprocessed mediocrity is just as unforgivable. If I’m going to tell a story about breaking two TVs and my garage-opener meltdown, I have to deliver it with Earthquake’s power and confidence. Otherwise I’ll stay home, mope on the couch, and binge crime documentaries—losing myself in bigger, cleaner tragedies than my own.

Comments

2 responses to “Comparison Is the Mother of Misery”

  1. 501 Pound Brain Avatar

    I’m a late bloomer. While most dudes, and certainly the jock cretins I walked the hallowed halls of Meadville High School with back in the early 80’s when I was an obese curly headed Ornette Coleman & John Coltrane obsessed jazz muso did, peak between 17 to 22 years old I hit my stride at a relatively ancient 45-50 years old.

    My comparison hobgoblin isn’t with anyone except me, back then.

    And at 62 years old I hate it. Not because I can’t get it back or do it again mind you. No, because I didn’t even, wasn’t smart enough, to even recognize how goddamn amazing it was. It was full metal awesome and I just cruised through it thinking it was my new Normal. And then real chronological age hit, and along with it the soberingly stiff drink of mortality thinking.

    They say age is a cruel mistress… and now more than ever I just recently know why.

    Because it is.

    Anything is possible when you not so much as know it is but Think/Feel it is…

    where the divide occurs is when you pair that with the hard slapping sting of statistics and average lifespans.

    That crushes the dream of Comparisons. Or at least for me it does.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Eddie Avatar
    Eddie

    Great stuff as always. I do kiss your watch musings on a near weekly basis, but I’m equally enjoying your blog even way out here in middle England. I look forward to my morning coffee and another one (or even two!) of your posts. Maybe this format is a place to chill for a while until returning to YouTube. Or not? Regardless, your output matters and many thanks from across the pond!

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