HONESTY AND THE LENS
I haven’t posted in a while. I’m sorry it has been that way. School got the better of me and no matter how much that’s a typical excuse, when I say it, it’s the truth.
There’s something in particular I’d love to post from
Suzyo’s journal but I can’t. The pages the writings are on are not in the best
of conditions and the words on some parts have become faint with time. I know
the overarching story he was trying to put across so with a little research I
can fill in the gaps. Only then will I be ready to post it.
Be that as it may, here goes nothing.
My love for novels is inexpressible. I don’t see myself ever
stopping to read them, even when I have a fringe of grey-white hair around my
balding.
People tend to think that there are no lessons to be learnt from
novels, that they are merely stories, but that’s not true. Every book - if read
generously - is valuable and worthy of attention. Well, save for those that may
be in certain senses ‘destructive’ like books by E. L. James
I recently read The
Last Letter From Your Lover by Jojo Moyes, a novel, and I did learn quite a
bit from it.
I’ll try not to ruin the story.
The first part of the novel is set in 1960. When Jennifer
Stirling wakes up in a hospital, she can remember nothing - not the tragic car
accident that put her there, not her husband, not even who she is. She feels
like a stranger in her own life until she stumbles upon an impassioned letter,
signed simply "B", asking her to leave her husband.
All the letters that B and Jennifer wrote to each other are
in the novel. The honesty in them is admirable. It shows you that theirs was a
love affair that meant something. B was a man who cracked himself open in front
of the woman he loved; he sought to understand her and tried to protect her, even
from herself. When he couldn’t save her, he removed himself to the other side
of the world and, quite likely, sacrificed himself. And Jennifer mourned him
for forty years.
Sometimes, if you pay attention at least, the lesson in a novel is easy to see. B’s story shows what honesty can do to a person.
Tell me
something, are you happy in this modern world? Maybe you are being honest with
yourself, maybe you are not. Jordan B. Peterson, the Canadian Clinical
psychologist who wrote the book 12 Rules
For Life, says, “the act of honesty is particularly important when it
challenges what we know and rely on, leaving us upset or destabilized.” If B
chose not to be honest, he would be denying that honesty makes the best use of
future possibilities. Honesty was the light he had in the darkness of a life
lived without Jennifer. And so, if your life is not what it could be, try being
honest. If you feel unhappy, weak and rejected, and desperate, and confused, or
if you’re wallowing in nihilism, try being honest with yourself. Even when you
don’t get what you want, honesty is serenity.
The second part of the novel is set years later, in 2003. A
journalist named Ellie discovers the same enigmatic letter that B wrote in a
forgotten file in her newspaper's archives. She becomes obsessed by the story
and hopeful that it can resurrect her faltering career. Perhaps if these lovers
had a happy ending she will find one to her own complicated love life, too.
Ellie's search will rewrite history and help her see the truth about her own
modern romance.
Ellie’s love life was complicated. She falls in love with
someone she shouldn’t have. She defends herself in a conversation with a friend
by saying she didn’t mean to fall in love. But she made a choice. We all make
choices. Even though we may sometimes feel transported by something, even
though we may feel pulled to some places, we are hardly ever victims of
circumstance. Every act has a consequence. The world is divided into people who
can see that, and make a decision accordingly, and those who just go for what
feels good at the time.
The lesson there may or may not be as easy to see. Sometimes,
books only make sense when read through a lens. The lens being how you find
yourself in a book or parts of it. Ellie falls in love with someone she
shouldn’t have. As time goes by she’s faced with a choice to be made. She could
either act accordingly or do what would feel good at the time. Here’s the lens I
used or how I related to her story: You and I have fallen in love with the
world. A world filled with vanity, a world that is passing away and a world
that only leads to death. Time and time
again we have heard this and also how that while we still loved this world the
Sovereign Ruler of the skies sent His Son to die in our place. And we know that
this is love beyond measure. And so we’re faced with a choice, either to act
accordingly or to do what feels good at this time. Sadly, we choose to lose
ourselves to the temporary.
If you read to be moved, books can expand your universe and
change parts of the way you think. Every book has a way in which it can inform
and widen your thoughts about certain subjects. Pay attention as you read and
you’ll see.
Signing off,
Akwasi Dzifa.



Boi, this is amazing ππ₯.....I've really enjoyed and learned something out of it.... continue with great writings ✊π
ReplyDeleteI want to read this book yesterday!!!!! I enjoyed reading this blog Suzyo!!
ReplyDeletekeep it up!
Thank you. I'll try to keep it up π
DeleteGreat stuff here.❤
ReplyDeleteThank you
DeleteEish!!!
ReplyDeleteLol thanks bro
DeleteTale as old as time "honesty is the best policy". Love this
ReplyDeleteGreat read bro, great read. I kinda feel like i need to read those other books now to get a clearer picture of this post. π
ReplyDeleteThanks bro π― Read the others when you can π ✊
DeleteUuuuh this makes beautiful reading....nice.
ReplyDeleteThank you π
DeleteThis is awesomeπππ keep it up brother
ReplyDeleteThank you my brother. I'll try my best to keep it up πππ
DeleteLovely!!!
ReplyDeleteSense!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Daniel man π
Delete