Joe Student
Joe Teacher
Why I am Not the Perfect Kid
When my best friend told me how perfect I was I actually blushed. What was it that she said, "You have great parents, you're getting great grades in school, you don't drink or smoke, you've never even thought about trying drugs, you're single with no kids -- hell, all nineteen-year-olds should have your life -- It's perfect - ***** -- you're perfect." suppose I blushed because in my head I am not the perfect kid. Besides, what is perfection and why do I feel I have not achieved it? Do I even want to achieve it? When I think of perfection I always think of the story of John Humphrey No/yes who died in 1886. No/yes was an outspoken religious and communal leader who in the 1860's helped found Oneida Community in central New York. No/yes had some crazy ideas and wrote some outrageous doctrines regarding alternative forms of marriage, but more important to this discussion is that he felt that he had reached perfection. "Born in Brattleboro, Vermont, No/yes was educated at Dartmouth and the Andover Seminary. While at Yale Divinity School, he announced that he had achieved human perfection and was promptly expelled." (Author not available, Noyes, John Humphrey (1811-1886)) Will I be expelled if I reach the realm of human perfection and become the perfect kid?
In nature, perfection is a survival skill. "In brief, nature was continually producing "low forms" of life, i.e., spontaneously generating. At any point in time, a creature could be challenged or stimulated by its environmental circumstances. Responding in some behavioral or anatomical manner -- it would need to respond or change in order to survive -- the organism would pass the modification to its offspring, and so enable its descendants to be a little more perfect. This improvement in the face of environmental challenge permitted the various primordial life-forms to rise up the scale of perfection. (Marks, 11) Well, I do survive from day-to-day. Does that...
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