2.11.2019

I’m still not one of the cool kids…



“Good luck with that *deliberate, sarcastic pause* …project.”

These were the last words I heard from the author who had come to my hometown to promote his book; a hefty, hardback tome about a river and the deaths that it carried with it. During the reading portion of the event, I started getting the feeling that this author was a like soul, a brother in the field, so-to-speak. He waxed on about how creating twists in his fiction just sort of “came to him,” and that establishing the prose was a process more akin to art than science. 

Man, he’s cool, I thought. And he thinks like I do! That must mean… I’m cool!

But, I’m not cool. Never was. It never occurred to me to change who I was around people, and that—it seems—is a prerequisite for being cool. To put on a show of affable disinterest. Only, if that’s what being cool is, then no one, it seems, is truly cool. Are they?

Flash-forward to the end of the event. I typically lurk in the corners until the onslaught of raving fans dissipates and I can have a more one-on-one conversation with the celebrity. To me, giving them the common decency to connect on a human level is what is most important. And, I don’t change that to be cool. 

So, I walked up to him and we chatted for a few minutes. I explained how I was a fledgling author (to position my commentary as more than just anecdotal) and then marveled at his book tour going so successfully. He seemed cheery enough. But then, with his answers, I began getting the feeling like he was not interested in talking with me. 

Of course, it wasn’t as if he had anything better to do; his fan-base had dwindled and the store was closing soon—presumably he had a hotel bed waiting for him somewhere. Although, he made no motion of getting up from his table, or indication that he was done. It was just an attitude, perhaps.  
And in that moment, the feeling of uncoolness began to settle on my psyche in the same way wisps of snow settles on a rose bush. It wasn’t so obvious that I understood what was happening at that moment, but the feeling started to erode my generally pleasant disposition. 

A few moments later, after talking to someone I knew who was also there, I crossed the room to reach the exit. As I passed by his table, I said over the small bookshelf between us, “It was a pleasure meeting you.”

You're just jealous I'm so kind.
That’s when it happened: with an audience of only one or two other people, the “cool” author had to keep up appearances. Forget any altruistic notions, or congenial discourse—this had to have bravado. Apparently, he thought we were fighting for a mate, because with no just cause, he deftly minimized my existence in deference of his own with the insincere salutation, sarcastic pause, and weaponized word “project.” 

My book, my platform, my hopes of a future as an author was, to this author, a mere “project.”
Still thinking that he and I were two equal humans sharing a moment with each other, I didn’t quite process the sarcasm until I was in my car and on the road. To me, we were just chatting. To him, it was a reinforcing of status. And that left me wanting. 

For the next two days, I pondered why I suddenly felt that all my relationships on social media, my (albeit sparse) blogging, my writing in general was a complete waste of time. Why didn’t I just go get a real job? And then, it hit me. I was shivering in the aura of coolness

Only, it wasn’t, well, cool. Even days later, this author was syphoning off my passion, my interests, my love of crafting words into drivel to propagate his own superiority. All it managed to do was motivate me to focus on my own lack, and to long for—maybe even design for—that lack to be filled. 

Aha—that was it!

Being cool is service of self. It’s arrogance in a nice package. It is selfishness to such an extreme that it feeds off the self-confidence and altruism of anyone around it. The author wouldn’t ever see me again, so what did it matter if he took a little more for his pride that night? It’s not like I needed it, after all, I’m not a NYT best-selling author. 

But I see now, with even more clarity, that for myself being cool is not the aim. This is not new to me, of course, but at least it offers a better perspective for me than just thinking—however distantly—that I’ll never achieve it. It is nice to know, after all, that turning your back on societal acceptance has its merits. I don’t want to be selfish about my writing. I don’t want to be cool. I prefer altruism. I prefer generosity. I prefer being hot. Er, wait… that didn’t come out right… 

If I don’t sell a single book, but I can rest at night knowing that I made people feel better about themselves, allowed them to connect on a human level with me, and/or gave them something of myself that might help them better understand the world, then I would call that a success. Even if I reached the level of this author, I’m not sure I would—at least I HOPE I wouldn’t—be cool.  


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