« Loving the Man in the Mirror | Main | Getting from Child-ish to Child-like »

August 24, 2008

The Arts Are a Waste of Time

37798326 This is an era of ever-tightening budgets and precarious performance in students' basic skills. It's an era of 'No Child Left Behind', although very many still are. Many inner-city schools are in disrepair, school supplies are hard to come by, and teachers are generally ridiculously under-paid (and often have to donate classroom supplies out of their own pockets). When push comes to shove, the school budgets get pared down along with nearly everything else. What does that say about us?

Actually, the state of education in the US bears eloquent testimony to our practical values. I say 'practical values' to distinguish them from our 'theoretical values', which are far different. Theoretically, we value hard work, education, moral rectitude, the flag, mom, and apple pie. In practice, we value entertainment. That's what we spend most of our thoughts, time, and wealth on. Entertainment heads up this list of our practical national values because that's what we worry most about.

But I digress. In an age that would rather cut educational budgets rather than inconvenience the population (remember those opinion polls and all those up-coming elections), Popular wisdom insists that the remaining dollars be spent on reading, math, science and (the often-unlisted essential) sports rather than wasting them on artistic frivolousness like fine arts, music, literature, dance, or theater. These things don't contribute to the gross national product, they don't enhance our position in international academics, and they aren't amenable to measurement by standardized testing. In short, they're a waste of time and money.

Sadly, this all-too-short-sighted (but fairly prevalent) opinion can have a devastating affect on people experiencing the midlife transition. I say this because even when 'practical' knowledge has yielded its harvest of career and income and all the toys and bells and whistles that come with it, the human spirit discovers itself surprisingly unsatisfied, overburdened, and yet longing for more. What you've gained and what you have suddenly turn into burdens. The more 'stuff' you accumulate, the more it owns you: it demands your energy and attention to maintain it. The promise of contentment that it made to you once upon a time remains disturbingly unkept.

There's a hunger in the human soul that material things just cannot satisfy, and it's only at midlife, when you've done a good deal of your accumulating, that you begin to notice it. It's a hunger to create as well as to be nourished by deeper — soul-stirring — meaning. Humans just aren't fully human without aesthetic and artistic expression. The famous stone age cave paintings of Lascaux weren't put there by some hired interior designer. They weren't zoological diagrams, blueprints, or productivity-enhancements. They were aesthetic creations that somehow communicated something far deeper and more fundamental than words could ever convey between human souls. Even today, they somehow very deeply touch our common humanity — the essence of who we are — across vast distances of time and space.

There's a longing in your heart to create and to leave something of yourself (your true inner self) behind that goes beyond mere reproduction. Your children are certainly your legacy, but is that all you want to leave behind? What's the price you pay in your soul for stifling your inner creativity? What do you ultimately lose, and is it worth it?

Furthermore, the undeniable longing that may lie hidden and unrecognized until midlife also expresses itself in a hunger to be fed with meaning that goes far beyond the chatter of the evening news or the talking heads arguing endlessly about issues that will very soon be 'yesterday's news.' Despite all the budget cuts and program droppings of our bottom-line-obsessed society, people still dig into their souls, distill what they find there (the attractive as well as the repulsive), and serve up the potent liquor of raw emotion in all the arts I listed earlier. Time and energy spent with the arts is only wasted if you measure the results in dollars and cents. But the value of dollars and cents doesn't hold up well against the challenges of midlife. Then it's the longings of the soul that take precedence: longings that need to be satisfied, otherwise something even more precious than life itself may be lost: your humanity.

Signature_les



H. Les Brown, MA, FCC
Copyright © 2008 H. Les Brown

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , ,

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83420792a53ef00e5541d3e378833

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The Arts Are a Waste of Time:

» Midlife Mastery Blog: The Arts Are a Waste of Time from PlugIM.com
Midlife is a time when science and technology, although wonderful, fails to satisfy. It stimulates our need for deeper levels of creativity. [Read More]

» Midlife Mastery Blog: The Arts Are a Waste of Time from healthranker.com
Midlife is a time when science and technology, although wonderful, fails to satisfy. It stimulates our need for deeper levels of creativity. [Read More]

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Hi, Les--

I couldn't agree more!

In addition to all of the truths you so eloquently present, there's one more. A number of years ago, I was doing some research for a speech regarding the arts in education. One study affirmed the 'bottom line' benefits of the arts. With the initiation of a fine arts program (and no other changes), grades in the 'hard core solids' (math, reading) improved.

I'm convinced of the value of art in all its forms. Music, dance, visual art -- all nourish the spirit and flex the muscles of creativity. In so doing, engagement in the arts improves those 'left brain' functions as well. I hope one day our practical values will begin to reflect our theoretical ones!

Hiya Les,

First time I've been to your site and I very much enjoyed reading this article, however you have no social bookmarking buttons your page so was unsure if you used/preferred any? As such I Stumbled your main page, will keep reading!

Thanks,
Jonathan

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Ask Les . . .

  • What's On Your Mind?

    What's the single biggest question you have about your the transitions you're facing? You know, transition doesn't have to be a 'crisis' — it doesn't even have to be dramatic!

    . . . Ask Les anything!
    Name*
    Email*
    Phone
    My Question for Les:
    Subscribe to my e-Zine?
    Please   No Thanks
    We respect your email privacy and promise to never sell, barter, share or rent your email address to any unauthorized third party. Period!
Bookmark and Share

Blogroll

Your Host: Les Brown

Serenity Prayer

  • (Long Form)

    God grant me the SERENITY to
    accept the things I cannot change;
    COURAGE to change the things I can;
    and WISDOM to know the difference.

    Living one day at a time;
    enjoying one moment at a time;
    accepting hardships as the pathway to peace;

    taking, as He did, this sinful world
    as it is, not as I would have it:

    Trusting that He will make all things
    right if I surrender to His Will;
    that I may be reasonably happy in this life
    and supremely happy with Him forever in the next.
    Amen

Current Events

Site Meter

Promotions