“The perfect is the
enemy of the good.”
And also of everyone
trying to be perfect.
I have been thinking about what I’ve been writing about
lately.
My grandfather’s “humorous” response to my announcing I had
gotten a “96” on my arithmetic exam, which, if you will recall, was,
“Where’s the other ‘4’?”
(It wasn’t his fault.
His very poor family in Russia could not afford a legitimate sense of humor.
They had to settle for the lower grade “teasing that sounds like a joke but isn’t.”)
Surviving the sting of the
“high-praise-third-rate-punchline” switcheroo, after whimpering in my room, I
emerged to, henceforth throughout my life, as with the explorers of Yore and other places, search obsessively for that
naggingly elusive “Other 4.”
What did happen to
those “Other ‘4’”? If you can achieve “96”
– like if you climbed 96 steps of a 100-step staircase, would you suddenly turn
around and go back? You accomplished ninety-six
percent of your objective! Why not bear
down and finish the job?
I know that’s “apples” and “staircases.” One is physical; the other is… I don’t know what the other is. Maybe, at some strategic juncture during the
exam, “Arithmetic Earl” got foolishly overconfident, or sloppily careless. Maybe one “four-mark” question was simply beyond
his ability. Mathematics is
difficult. I bet even Einstein didn’t
always get a hundred.
EINSTEIN: “Dumbkopf! I forgot to carry the 7.”
Still, it gnaws at me – this concept of “Perfection.” Since no one ever achieves it, you begin to
wonder if it actually exists. Maybe
“Perfect’s” a “Ghost Word” – an idea, lacking evidenced validity. You pound intently on “Perfect’s” door and
there’s nobody inside. You step into the
house…
… and there’s wind.
There are a number
of words like that. Heaven. The truth.
Things you (may) reflexively believe in, though they (may be) factual
“hot air.” Maybe “Perfect’s” just
another of those words.
All I know is – and not
just about my imperfect achievements
but about everyone’s – I have no enthusiasm
for examining the “96.” I am inexorably
drawn to exploring the “4.”
Take a moment to imagine how popular that makes me.
To me, the “96” are the planes that landed without
incident. My attention’s on the four planes that didn’t. Especially if they
were flown by the same pilot.
Wait, that doesn’t work.
Because the pilot would have had to survive at least three plane crashes. Let me try that again.
I’m not interested in the 99 planes that landed without
incident. My attention’s on the one plane that didn’t.
Better.
I mean, it’s not that
unusual. Do they examine the “Black Boxes”
of the planes that arrive safely?
No. (And nobody derides them for eschewing the “Positive Outcomes.”
So you can see how that’s a little
unfair.)
(Amor Towles’s) A
Gentleman in Moscow.
The most enjoyable novel I have ever encountered, with its
incomparable attention to detail. But
there were also some detectable letdowns.
The same guy wrote all the pages.
Why weren’t they all equally perfect?
Did the “Missed it by that much” (a miniscule fraction of a
degree) bother him?
I just shrugged.
But I know who it did
bother.
Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw. Greatest pitcher of his generation. Struck out eleven batters in seven innings
during the playoffs.
But he also
surrendered a towering home run.
An incredible performance.
But not perfect.
And you could tell that he was struggling with that. During the postgame interview, Kershaw
mentioned “I missed with one” and then immediately blew past it, not because he was keeping things in
proportion, or because “professional athletes behave that way”, but because –
and you could palpably feel it – deep
down, it was absolutely eating the guy
up!
THE INNER KERSHAW: “What the heck happened on that pitch?” (Kershaw’s unfathomable “The other 4.”)
“Closer” extraordinaire
– he procures the crucial last outs of the game – Kenley Jansen. Perfect during the playoffs. Until he gave up a home run and blew the
“Save.” (He was unable to retain the
lead, in a game the Dodgers
eventually lost.)
I read his quote in the following day’s newspaper, providing
me no visual record his behavior. Was he
totally honest? Or did a flickering “eye
tell” betray some unspoken inner turmoil?
I don’t know.
But I do know
this. Kenley Jansen said something
important, possibly the illuminating key to the confounding mystery of
“Perfection.”
“I’m not a robot”, he explained to the media.
I think he was on
to something.
Why are the most accomplished practitioners in their fields
unilaterally denied the sublime experience of perfection?
“I’m not a robot.”
It’s just as simple as that.
You want to strive for perfection? Sure. Why
not aim for the stars? (Or as Mel Brooks, reworking the title of
Werner Von Braun’s biography proclaimed, “I Aim For the Stars… And Hit
London.”)
It may be true than an “Impossible Standard” does, in fact, bolsteringly elevate your
performance.
But it’s good to also remember Kenley Jansen’s – whether he
meant it or not –
“I’m not a robot.”
And more importantly, deep inside you where it really
matters…
To believe it.
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