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I’ll Be Brief – Entry #6

I'll Be Brief - Entry #6
Photo: Said Tahseen, courtesy of public domain

In war the victorious strategist only seeks battle after the victory has been won,

Sun Tzu

During the Battle of Hattin a Crusader army foolishly marched through the desert outside Jerusalem and found themselves out of water. Saladin harassed them from afar with arrows and light skirmishers, but refused to commit the full weight of his troops into an all-out fight. By their own actions the Crusaders had already doomed themselves, and he knew all he had to do was wear them down until they were too weak to pose a significant threat.

Eventually that moment came, and the Saracens stormed the Crusader’s main defenses with few casualties. The survivors were either butchered or sold into slavery.

The takeaway is that an enemy often weakens you before he commits to an attack. Depending on the situation and context, it takes hours, days, weeks, years or even decades. But the day finally comes when he decides he is ready for a full-on assault.

A lot of people today see the assault happening in front of their very eyes, but think it’s the opening skirmish.

And thus:

All things fall apart/the center cannot hold.

I’ll Be Brief – Entry #5

Most fights occur over something other than what triggered it. They’re pretexts. World War I started when a Serbian shot the heir to the Austria-Hungarian throne. But the war wasn’t fought over him. A bitter church feud over whether to have pews or chairs in the sanctuary is really a struggle over something else more important but nobody wants to openly discuss.

Famous historical figures often defined history by imposing their will on it. Other times, they merely instigated something that was always beyond their control. Populist movements are always feared because they exist with or without a leader and are harder to defeat than one driven by a few individuals.

People too often confuse the catalyst with the fuel. If you want to avoid a fire, you get rid of the fuel. Catalysts will always come and go. Lighting strikes don’t cause megafires; it’s the fuel loads and overly-dense forestland.

To keep with the analogy, we ignore the fuel because to acknowledge it requires asking where it came from and how it got there. So we let it build up until it bursts into flame, then blame whoever started it as wholly responsible.

I’ll Be Brief – Entry #4

I suspect one major cause of the modern psychosis plaguing the West is self-deceit. People lie to themselves, and not about small things. They internalize beliefs that are contradicted every waking hour of the day within countless interactions. It’s like professing the sky to be yellow and water to be on fire. To continue to believe it, you must constantly block those things out of your mind.

The people in charge of things, those in power, pretend to be helpless victims as they lash out at the powerless who are deemed to be covertly controlling everything. Those who are among “the haves” insist they’re one of the “have nots” as they hoard and consolidate even more.

The cowardly and pathetic pretend to be brave and heroic for proclaiming beliefs that involve no risk. They are praised by people who pretend to support out of sincere belief, not complacency or fear of consequences.

All this takes a toll.

Self-deceit is a horrendous vice, but seldom discussed.

I’ll Be Brief – Entry #3

“Mikey, why am I out?” – Tom Hagan

“You’re not a wartime consigliere, Tom.” – Michael Corleone

You don’t have a gardener fight your wars, and you don’t have a warrior plant your garden.

Too often today we expect the wrong people to do a job, so it never gets done, or it’s done poorly.

The problem is we assume that someone in a leadership position possesses certain qualities that work well when the group is not in danger. They keep the peace. But peacemakers don’t fight wars.

Some men are suited best to lead during certain times, and when it is over they step down. Some are best suited to preserve and maintain what is; others are good at restoring.

Then there are those are good at destruction.

There is a chronic inability today to differentiate them.

The decay and demise of many institutions come as a surprise to people because they assumed, incorrectly, that those in charge were the kind of men who would hold the line. They weren’t. And the type of men they expect to fix things won’t, because that’s not who they are and never was.

If things get fixed, it will be done by men who do so in spite of intense opposition from the very people they seek to help. If it happens at all.

I’ll Be Brief: Entry #2

You can tell someone what you want done, or how you want it done. Many were raised to do the former. Following rules was emphasized over whether or not the goal was achieved. In fact, there was an implicit belief that following the rules mattered more than whether it achieved anything or not. Following the rules was really meant to validate an institution or person.

But too many rules, procedures, methods, and processes don’t have a meaningful lifespan. The only way to navigate the world today is by focusing on the objective and crafting your path accordingly, on what actually works. If you’re trying to summit a mountain and the “official” path is blocked or impassable, you either turn around and quit or you blaze your own trail to the top. Few go on a hike with staying on the official trail as the first and foremost goal.

In 2019 I hiked Eightmile Mountain, which has no trail of any kind. I simply hiked where it was passable. It wasn’t my fondest hikes, and perhaps I could have picked a better approach, but in the end I reached the summit.

I also got photos like this.

I'll Be Brief: Entry #2
Eightmile Lake below

I’ll Be Brief: Entry #1

In my early livestreaming days I had a habit of saying “I’ll be brief,” and then proceeded to be anything but. It got be a running joke amongst friends that remains to this day.

I decided to take the idea and actually run with it.

I’ve done blogging in the past, but more or less quit. Some think blogs are over and done with in favor of livestreaming.

This may be, but I think another part of it is blog posts need to be short. Very short. Like something someone can read within a minute.

That’s where “Ill Be Brief” comes in.

Entries will consist of snippets of thoughts that come to mind, usually a general observation about life. Moreover, they will be genuinely concise, no more than 100 words. Chances are, you’ll hear me expound further on it during an upcoming Mountain Pass Podcast.

Mountain Pass Podcast – The Scoundrel Episode

I discuss:

– Why many heroes are scoundrels
– Doing the wrong thing out of bravery and doing the right thing out of cowardice
– The film Beckett and how the State v. Church struggle in the Middle Ages compares to the Corporate v. State struggle today.

https://soundcloud.com/tjmartinell/mountain-pass-podcast-the-scoundrel-episode

Mountain Pass Podcast – The Playful Banter Episode

I discuss:

– The real life of Davy Crockett and some of the lessons it offers us today
– How conversation is like dancing, why they’re important to romantic interactions, and why both are lost arts.

https://soundcloud.com/tjmartinell/mountain-pass-podcast-the-playful-banter-episode

Mountain Pass Podcast – The (Real) Rules For {Redacted} Summer Episode

I discuss:

– Why you should read the book Dove (I covered this in episode 49 two years ago)
– Why all men crave the Great Adventure
– The (real) rules for {Redacted} Summer
– Another “father was unavailable for comment” tale

https://soundcloud.com/tjmartinell/mountain-pass-podcast-the-summer-2021-rules-episode

Mountain Pass Podcast – Radio Free America Episode

I discuss:

– Prepping the garden this year, and lessons learned
– The growing East-West Germany-like divide within the USA
– The true foundation for a virtuous man

https://soundcloud.com/tjmartinell/mountain-pass-podcast-radio-free-america-episode

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