What is the American Dream?
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,192 legacy views
What is the American Dream? Is it two kids, a new car, a good job, and a big new house with a pet dog to greet you at the door? Hmm... At least there was a deeper conception of it when it was invented.
James Truslow Adams answered the questio
"What is the American Dream?" in his book, "The Epic of America" in 1931. In fact, that was the first time the term was used. He called it, "that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement. It is a difficult dream for the European upper classes to interpret adequately, and too many of us ourselves have grown weary and mistrustful of it. It is not a dream of motor cars and high wages merely, but a dream of social order in which each man and each woman shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable, and be recognized by others for what they are, regardless of the fortuitous circumstances of birth or position."
That's a nice thought. Of course, a "social order in which each man and each woman shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable," is something desired by most of the world, so it may be a bit presumptuous to call it the "American" dream. In any case, is that what it means to people in the United States now?
I went to a forum on this subject and found one post that summed up what all the other contributors were saying. According to this person, the American Dream is:
A family
A home that one owns
A steady job
Health
Modest luxuries like nicer cars and clothes
Time to relax
Nobody, by the way, mentioned the goal, "to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable." Nor was anything said about a "richer and fuller" life except in the crudest sense of having more things and "luxuries." Now, I have nothing against wealth and luxuries, but I wonder if what we call the American Dream is now just a hypnotic idea that causes stress and disappointment. In other words, has it become the American Nightmare?
For example, my wife and I choose not to start a family beyond ourselves, but how many who are not meant to be parents (seriously, not all people should have kids) do so anyhow, because they are following the dream? What are the consequences?
Does it matter to ones happiness if they own a home or rent one? If so, then perhaps some renters' unhappiness is only a result of the dream that tells them they have failed. And a job is just one way of many to pay for the necessities of life. Believe me, after forty or so jobs I can tell you that I didn't want any of them to be "steady." As for health, it's obviously a good thing, and desired by more than just Americans.
Modest luxuries? That's a wonderful goal, as is time to relax. But the dream that most Americans have pushes them to buy luxuries too soon - before they can afford them - and to buy too much. The resulting debt then requires a lifestyle of hard work. This eats up "time to relax" and causes more and more stress. The needs of children are ignored, adult toys pile up in garages and yards, and debts pile up until they threaten the loss of homes. This then, becomes the American Nightmare.
What is the American Dream? It's like all dreams created to entice us into them - a hypnotic distraction from our responsibility to discover for ourselves what we really need in life.
Article author
About the Author
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Intuitive Process Painting As A Spiritual Practice
People paint for a lot of different reasons. To relax, to express themselves , to create beauty and meaning, to make money, because they have a passion to create, to gain approval, to stay sane, to make sense of the world, to play and have fun. All of the above are wonderful and valid ...
Related piece
Article
The Creative Process, How And Why It Works
Creativity is a subtle and magnificent dance between the rational and the intuitive, between the left and right parts of the brains, between technique and imagination. Both partners in this dance are absolutely necessary and are needed in equal proportion, which means that imagination is not more important than technique and visa versa. If you only live in the imagination, you will never get organized, you will never complete your story. However, if you start from the rational, linear, organizational part of the process, ( ie. Gotta have the perfect opening sentence and first paragraph...
Related piece
Article
The Happy Ending - Love Conquers All Or Thoughts On Fiction Writing After Dialoguing With My Dog
Recently, I was considering the question of peace, which doesn't happen often while writing fiction. There's all that drama, love, hate, desire, envy and so on. Peace, with any luck, comes at the end of the novel. I was considering this aimlessly as I lay with my head on Phoebe's warm flank. Phoebe, being the sensitive, intuitive creature she is, immediately tuned into my musings and suggested we consider the question of love instead, which she quite rightly observed was a precursor to true peace.
Related piece
Article
How To Make A Bad Kid Good Again: The Story of Michael, Peter & Harry The Cat
It is sometimes said that the truth should never be allowed to get in the way of a good story. Sometimes, however, it is the true events that turn out to be the stories that tell us the most. This is the case with the story of my friend's cat. My friend, Rachel, has a cat. Nothing special ...
Related piece