In response to this video: http://www.ted.com/talks/mihaly_csikszentmihalyi_on_flow.html
So
I forced myself (against my will) to watch the video, and I never
achieved any kind of flow. I do have to wonder if he is suggesting, in
his research, that we just surrender to our own activities and give up
any kind of struggle, as he seems to have
little to no appreciation for the political. I also wonder about the
significance of achieving the ecstatic state he describes, as it
distract us from the actual conditions of the world. This is what
Capitalism has been drawing us towards, evidenced in a theoretical
market structure that rewards monetarily-demonstrable wants to the point
of infinite. But read Infinite Jest. It isn't a bible, and it certainly
doesn't hold truths, but the very existence of a kind of
ecstasy-producing anything should not be anyone's end goal: its a
dangerous diversionary and even utopic endeavor that ends in little more
than the creation of a vegetative docility. And this appears to be
exactly what C-man is north-starring, which he makes abundantly clear at
the end, when he describes his goal as placing: "More and more life
into that flow channel". This goal seems anything but promising to me,
even dangerous, and we really shouldn't be striving for it at all.
Still, I acknowledge that his thoughts provide us a kind of comforting
respite from contention, our own space for being ourselves and
withdrawing from the world of humans (which is, by definition political)
and just enjoying ourselves, which I shouldn't criticize. But I really
don't know what the actual applications of these ideas are, and I think
they just signal further withdrawal into our own personal interests and
engagements at the cost of learning more about how to relate to others
and deal with the inevitably political aspects of difference.
Some
questions I have: why are we studying creativity? Does studying
creativity dispose of it? Can we engineer creativity? Can we engineer
happiness? Should we engineer happiness? Are some people going to be
able to experience flow more than others because it does require some
kind of material goods for its satisfaction? And interviewing CEOs for
feelings regarding success? Pretty typical. And my antithesis to TED is
very material, actually; I think they promote a kind of technological
and ideological fetishism. A sort of "be awed by these ideas and
educated by the latest and chic-est work," rather than "this is what is
being said; let's be critical about it." It's additionally troubling to
me that there is something called the Quality of Life Research Center,
where people are paid to study how I can have more happiness in my life.
http://qlrc.cgu.edu/about.htm
Do they know me? I don't know them very well. Perhaps they're working
with an ideal-type me that they think they can study and make informed
judgments about and get paid to research more and then go on talking
tours and endear other people to misguided ideas about the nature of
individuals and their behaviors.
I mean, I haven't done much other
reading about him, but I've heard the hype. I'm skeptical both of what
psychology intends to do in studying human behavior and assigning laws
and tendencies and rendering it 'determined,' as well as with some of
his particular thoughts. It breeds passivity and distracts from the real
state of the human being as political and differentiated and instead
replaces it with little more than empty, ecstatic 'flow.'
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