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ON ELIZABETH
GILBERT
by Miles
Mathis

I
could interpret between you and your love if I could see the
puppets dallying.—Shakespeare
This
critique of Elizabeth Gilbert was born from watching her
2009 TED lecture, but it has been filled out from reading her
book Eat,
Pray, Love.
My main thesis will be that Ms. Gilbert is an attractive, smart,
funny person; a good speaker with a calming voice; a talented
writer with great organizational skills; and a complete phony.
For those who
don’t know, TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, and
Design. Three of my least favorite things. If they had included
Economics, they could have had a full house. In fact, I recommend
they do so, and change the name to TEDEUS. Technology,
Entertainment, Design, and Economics in the United States. The
most tedious, mind-numbing fake categories of achievement and
study, for the misdirection of all modern effort.
TED
conferences have been around since the 1980s, and from the
beginning the organizers have invited the crème de la crème
of upwardly mobile phonies to speak, including Bill Gates,
Jimmy Wales, Bill Clinton, Al Gore, Helen Fisher, Aubrey de Grey,
Lee Smolin, Brian Greene, Yves Behar, Ben Saunders, Keith Barry,
J.J. Abrams, Eve Ensler, and on and on. It could be said, either
in a positive way or a negative way, that society is what it is
today due to the influence of people like this. The TED
conferences act as the positive answer, allowing these people to
further promote their ideas and creations (for just $6,000 you
can attend the conference and be the beneficiary of this
boosterism). I intend to supply the negative answer. My critique
of Elizabeth Gilbert could be translated as a critique of almost
any lecturer for TED, with only a few tweaks. These lecturers
have different interests and projects, but they have a clear
commonality in being polished surfaces with no substance. With a
few exceptions (like Jane Goodall) the TED lecturers are symbolic
of a culture that has utterly lost its soul, that has replaced
the éclat of true brilliance with the glare of public relations.
TED tries very hard to sell itself as a gathering of genius, but
it comes off as another advertising awards dinner.
The subject
of Ms. Gilbert’s lecture is “a different way to think about
creative genius.” She leads the lecture by telling the audience
that her latest book became a “mega-sensation international
bestseller thing.” She repeats this later in the lecture, just
in case we missed it the first time. Although she doesn’t seem
to be especially shy in tooting her own horn, she does avoid
coming out and telling us she is a genius. She doesn’t really
need to, since the subject of the lecture does that for her. Why
would she be talking about genius if she had no experience of it?
Obviously, she needed to spend long hours on this question of
genius, because it was so central to her method and to the
side-effects of her method… of writing self-help books.
She reminds
us in her lecture of the cliché of the creative person,
tormented and self-destructive, possibly alcoholic and probably
suicidal. Ms. Gilbert does not look suicidal or otherwise
imbalanced, but we are to understand that, just beneath this
shiny surface, the waves are crashing very hard. She tells us she
got past this danger by thinking of creative genius in a
different way. She thinks of genius like an elf that lives in the
wall, jumping into her head whenever she sits at the computer.
Because it is the elf that does the real work, and has the real
genius, she is saved from being such a towering egomaniac.
Of course, as
she admits, this is not a “different” or even a new way of
thinking of genius. It is the old, pre-TED way of thinking about
genius. Only the moderns are shallow enough to think that they
are responsible for themselves: their minds, their bodies, and
their actions. The “ancients,” up to the time of, say, Rodin,
thought the gods or Muses blessed the artist with his or her
ability or inspiration. These pre-Modern artists did not think
this way to save themselves from egomania: they really believed
it. They really believed that outside forces were at work, that
real mystery was involved. If they spoke to these forces or gods
or Muses, they did not do it as some sort of psychic joke, to
release tension or for other therapeutic reasons: they did it to
thank them.
For example,
Ms. Gilbert tells us a story about Tom
Waits shouting at the Muses to come back when he is not
driving: can’t they see that he is busy? This story gets a big
laugh, and it is telling in two ways: one, we get to hear from
another towering egomaniac phony, Tom Waits, pretending to be a
genius. Ms. Gilbert betrays her real level: she thinks Tom Waits
is an example of real genius, and so does her audience. They have
never considered the possibility that it is not hard to sing bad
songs with gravel in your voice, as long as you don’t care if
you trash your larynx. These are people constitutionally unable
to tell the difference between a real artist and a fake artist
[here is a
real musical genius], between real art and what Tolstoy
called “a simulacrum of art.” Two, this story is telling in
that we know it is fake: if the Muses had really been floating
over Tom Waits at this point, they would have replied by grabbing
the steering wheel and driving the smug bastard over a cliff. I
have had moments of inspiration while driving, and you know what
I do? I pull over and grab my fucking Big Chief tablet out of the
glove compartment and put my hand to my ear. I turn off the
radio, roll up the windows, and listen very very carefully. I
write it all down verbatim, and then ask humbly if that is all.
The Muse knows when and where to arrive: it is not up to me to
question these things. Her schedule is a little bit more
important than mine, I imagine.
In fact, the
Muse is writing this right now. When I first heard Ms. Gilbert’s
lecture, it didn’t offend me much, to be honest. Her voice took
me by the balls and caressed me into a state of non-judgment.
Unfortunately for her, the Muse overheard the lecture. Erato flew
down from her perch upon the roof and roused me from my slumbers
and told me to get my fingers loosened up: it was time for
another lesson.
The Muse said
to me: “Don’t you see what a sacrilege it is for this woman
to be joking about genius or inspiration, and to be bringing that
sack of bagshot Waits into it? I haven’t spent a second with
either person, and neither have any of my sisters, and I don’t
like her telling fibs. You haven’t yet read her book, but I
have, and I can tell you that it takes no large or small amount
of genius to write such a book. It takes an advance from a greedy
publisher and few months of proper calculation. You ask yourself
what the average shallow female most wants to read, and you write
it. Do you think the publisher looked at this book proposal and
thought, ‘wow, this would be a great spiritual
quest—well-thought-out, rigorous, real, and likely to bring
true transcendence. Let us hope that dear Elizabeth finds
herself’? Of course not. The publisher thought, ‘wow, this
sounds like a cash cow. Oprah will be all over this book like a
fat lady on a tub of double-buttered popcorn.’ Well, just as
the publisher thought, we may assume Ms. Gilbert thought. Look at
her subtitle: ‘One woman’s search for everything.’ Does a
person on a true spiritual quest subtitle her book something like
that? It is offensive to any and all spirits to begin a quest
with such demands or desires. Sorry, human female-girl thing, but
not even the gods find everything. Even Zeus gets thwarted in his
lusts by Hera. Even Bacchus has pains he must drown with wine.
Even Demeter loses a crop now and then. Athena gets to wear armor
and hunt with beautiful dogs, but she doesn’t also get to be
Aphrodite. No one gets everything. We Muses do not grant such
wishes, nor do we get involved with books with subtitles like
that. Only the Fates get involved in such cases, since we are
dealing with hubris here. Ms. Gilbert was not seeking inspiration
or genius, she was seeking the ‘mega-sensation international
best seller thing.’ She has it, and now we will see how it
feeds her soul. We already see her unwinding a bit here onstage,
joking about drinking gin in the morning. It is only a matter of
time before the joke becomes the JOKE. So, boy, read the book, do
some research and then open your ears for another terrible
tongue-lashing.”
Well, I must
admit that my ears are always ready for a tongue-lashing from the
lovely Erato, the wetter the better. She is the one lady whose
requests I never question, and whose lessons I never regret.
Not only did
I read (parts of) the book, I listened to a discussion that
lasted almost as long as the book, between Stephen Metcalf, Katie
Roiphe, and Julie Turner, at Slate magazine. Mr. Metcalf
took the side against and the women took the side for the book.
Now, I remember Ms. Roiphe fondly for her defense of men in the
90s, when almost no one else but Camille Paglia and she were
doing it (men were, and are, not allowed to defend themselves).
But here she doesn’t score many points. She defends the book
because it is better than Prozac Nation, which is
like defending Ted Bundy because he didn’t eat as many people
as Jeffrey Dahmer. She also finds Ms. Gilbert brave, since women
always get attacked for writing fluffy self-analysis. Yes, it
takes incredible bravery for a writer for GQ magazine to
dare to write a fluffy bestseller, since now it will be so hard
for her to be voted onto the Pantheon with Shakespeare and Dante
and Jane Austen. Julie Turner’s comments are even less to the
point, if possible: she likes the book because Ms. Gilbert ate at
some places in Rome at which she also ate. Ms. Turner is only
worried that the book will make these places so popular she won’t
be able to get reservations next time.
Mr. Metcalf
clearly hates the book, but he is kept in check by his desire not
to appear too Grinchy. Being at a table with two “intellectual”
women who like the book, he cannot just come out and say that the
book is a horrible piece of effluvium, a pox upon the history of
literature, and a measure of all who read it. He reads outloud a
few passages with apparent disgust, hoping the words will speak
for themselves, but the words don’t speak for themselves with
the ladies present, who seem unable to contextualize the
sentences beyond the periods at the end. They like Ms. Gilbert,
for interior reasons of their own, and they will defend her no
matter what idiocy she is caught saying in print.
Despite being
outnumbered, Mr. Metcalf clearly won the argument, if only
because he was the only one who attempted to make some objective
and substantive points. But Erato was not at all satisfied with
his performance, nonetheless. Ms. Roiphe asked him if his problem
was with Ms. Gilbert or with the project in general, and he
hedged by saying that someone might have made something of it.
But this is false. The project was offensive on the face of it,
and neither Isaiah nor Sappho could have done anything with it.
To prove
this, let us begin with the backstory. Ms. Gilbert, coming off a
nasty divorce, for which she felt some guilt, needed to do some
serious soul searching. She had cried herself out on the floors
of a thousand bathrooms and now she needed to really answer some
questions. She says she had gotten too skinny in her misery and
so wanted to put on a few pounds before she hit the ashrams and
bamboo mats and the bread and water fasts. So what did she do
(and this is our first big clue): She wrote up a book proposal,
got an advance, and then went to Italy for four months to pig out
on pizza!
Aha! Yes,
just what Jesus or the Buddha would have done. You don’t want
to head for the wilderness until you have gotten your trip
underwritten and insured, with a few hundred grand for pocket
money and pork, and a guarantee of 15% of profits (not including
paperback and movie rights).
Now, Ms.
Gilbert’s readers don’t see it this way, of course. They are
pulled in by that whole weight issue thing. She doesn’t want to
be skinny! She wants to be a big beautiful woman, with rolls of
good American fat hanging loosely from her middle, and jiggly
triceps, and knees like little balloons. Goodness, that is so
liberating!
Yes, we may
think of Ms. Gilbert’s audience as an audience of Charlotte
Hazes (you remember, Lolita’s mother?), whom Nabokov skewered
thusly:
She was,
obviously, one of those women whose polished words may reflect a
book club or a bridge club, or any other deadly conventionality,
but never her own soul; women utterly indifferent at heart to the
dozen or so possible subjects of a parlor conversation, but very
particular about the rules of such conversation, through
the sunny cellophane of which not very appetizing frustrations
can be readily distinguished.
And later
…fat
Haze suddenly spoiled everything by turning to me and asking me
for a light, and starting a make-believe conversation about a
fake book by some popular fraud.
The legion of Charlotte Hazes who
read Eat, Pray, Love don’t care that it is full of bald
inconsistencies, bad advice, temptations to sloth, greed,
gluttony, and moral solipsism; they don’t care that the only
discipline it contains is a shrewd slavery to the reader’s
every shallow need; they don’t care that it flings slights
intended and unintended to every god, muse, daemon, and clear
thinker in history; they only care that the woman gets fed,
burped by hairy gurus, and in the end bedded by a dark Brazilian.
This is porn for women, in the guise of a penitent prayer book.
And that is the whole problem. I
have no quarrel with fluffy entertainment or porn. Neither I nor
any Muse require that any male or female spend the whole day or
night in a posture of repentance. If Ms. Gilbert wants to get
fed, burped and bedded, with a bestseller to greet her at home,
fine, good for her. But for god’s sake, deary, don’t pretend
you are on some spiritual quest, that you have seen God in the
pizza, or that you give a rat’s ass for meditation. If you
prefer writing fluff to meditating, go to it. You will not offend
Erato or Buddha or Vishnu or Zeus or Frigga in the least. The
offense only comes with the pretense that you are doing what you
are not doing. You were clearly not pursuing any sort of
spirituality, since normally when people go to Rome on a
spiritual quest, they don’t spend all their time at the cafes,
looking for God in the pizza. They spend some time in the
museums, or at the Forum, or in the libraries, or in the
catacombs, or in the countryside.
If Ms. Gilbert had really been in
search of even one truth beyond food and sex, she might have
stayed home and re-read her Thoreau. Henry would have told her
that “it is a characteristic of wisdom not to do desperate
things.” She could have got that wisdom without reading past
the first few pages. Henry is known for importing some Eastern
philosophy, but he makes fun of gurus on page 2:
What I
have heard of Brahmins sitting exposed to four fires and looking
in the face of the sun; or hanging with their heads suspended,
over flames; or looking at the heavens over their shoulders,
“until it becomes impossible for them to resume their natural
position, while from the twist of the neck nothing but liquids
can pass into the stomach”; or dwelling, chained for life, at
the foot of a tree; or, measuring with their bodies, like
caterpillars, the breadth of vast empires; or standing on one leg
on the tops of pillars….
Ms. Gilbert’s entire trip, if not
an act of career, was an act of desperation. There is no need to
go to Rome for pizza. If you need to put on a few pounds, there
is good food to be had in Connecticut or New York City. Other
equally clueless people travel tens of thousands of miles from
Europe and Asia to gain a few expensive pounds in the restaurants
of New York City. The Italians have been good enough to come live
in the Big Apple, even, and they have brought their famous pizzas
with them, just for the benefit of rich folks from Waterbury. If
God really does hang out in pizza toppings, we must assume he
does it worldwide, not just in Rome.
And for meditation, Henry will tell
you that you don’t have to travel for that either.
One
hastens to South Africa to chase the giraffe, but surely that is
not the game he would be after…. Is not our own interior white
on the chart, black though it may prove, like the coast, when
discovered?
You would think a writer should
know this, since writers are paid to sail their own interior
seas. Beyond that, you don’t need to go to India to look
within. India has not cornered the market in quietude or routes
to the holy. All Ms. Gilbert had to do was quit crying in one of
those bathrooms, stare instead at the ceiling tiles above her,
and stay awhile. No chants or postures are necessary. No candles,
no masters, no breathing rates, no mantras, no mandalas, no
incense, no drugs, no smoke, no mats, nothing. If the bathroom
floor is cold, go to bed and sleep an extra two hours in the
morning. It will accomplish the same thing. Your mind will sort
itself out, with no conscious help from you. The greatest mistake
in becoming holy is trying to be holy. Just fucking relax.
In conclusion, I want to return to
Ms. Gilbert’s TED lecture. She tells us that contemporary
artists are unstable because the pressure of their own genius is
too much for them. Because they think the genius is in
themselves, instead of in the elves in the wall, they can’t
handle the enormity of it, and they crack up. Or, she says, they
crack up because they have one big success and then dry up. The
elf gives them one book or painting or song and then flits off.
Their glory days behind them, they take to drink and implode.
But once again, Ms. Gilbert has it
all wrong. This is not the trajectory of the artist. This is the
trajectory of the non-artist. The elves do not leave real
artists. The Muse is always on the roof. Fame is not fleeting for
artists, since artists don’t give a damn about fame. Fame is
fleeting for media phenoms, for PR gurus, pop bands and Hollywood
stars. These are the people that crack up from not being able to
produce the goods anymore. The David Hasselhofs who can’t come
up with a Baywatch spin-off, the Britneys who can’t buy another
hit from P-Diddy (since he is selling to younger girls who
haven’t blown out their bellies or faces yet).
Ms. Gilbert is not talking about
“creative people,” she is talking about herself. She is not
worried for the contemporary artist, in general, she is worried
about herself. Can she follow up her hit? Has she peaked? She
actually asks herself these questions on stage. I have an answer
for her. Who cares? Erato and her sisters have bigger things to
push along than the next self-help book for the shallow set. For
them, Eat, Pray, Love is no peak of anything, so there can
be no fall off, no downhill side.
If Ms. Gilbert really had any
integrity, she could admit that. She could say to herself, “Hey,
I made some money and had some fun. Now is the time to write a
real book. I don’t have to worry about paying the bills for,
say, three hundred years, so now is the time to write something
genuine—that is, something that has no popular appeal and no
chance of being published. I don’t have to care anymore what
the publishers want or what Oprah likes. I can write a real book
for real people: which means I will have an audience about the
size of Jane Goodall’s troop of mountain gorillas.
No, artists don’t crack up
because the elves are silent. They don’t crack up because they
can’t handle being the font of so much wisdom. They crack up
because they have to live in a society of non-artists and fake
artists—people who claim to care about art and holiness and
depth and subtlety and beauty and transcendence, but really
don’t. People who will read a mountain of trashy Oprah books
but who won’t read a page of real literature or poetry or art.
People who give lectures on the Muse without ever getting within
ten miles of a Muse. People who create lecture series about great
ideas, and then invite jugglers and magicians and politicians and
economists and administrators and self-help novelists to speak.
Artists crack up because they are surrounded by huge piles of
awful non-art, promoted to the skies as poignant and thrilling by
ever-growing companies of plastic people. They take to drink to
soothe their souls from this daily battering by the evermore bold
and strident salesmen and saleswomen of the future, selling us a
stripped down model of humanity as a form of progress and
progressivism. They fall into fatal funks and depressions from a
chronic deficiency in beauty and truth. Everywhere the falsehoods
are published as novelties while the truth is ignored as a
nuisance. Everywhere the monstrosities are exhibited as edifying,
while the lovelinesses are ignored as passe.
You will say the real artist has
always been a weird minority, damned by the numbers, and this
much is true. But at least in the past the artist did not have to
countenance the fake artist in his place. Leonardo was the odd
man out, in almost all ways, but he did not have to watch Damien
Hirst take his place, and steal the very bread from his lips, the
wine from his glass. Tolstoy finally quit the field of
literature, but that was his own choice. He did not have to watch
Jacqueline Suzanne and Louis L’Amour waltz in and replace him
as premier novelist, permanently bankrupting him and sending him
to work at Walmart. Thoreau never tried very hard to sell books,
but at least he didn’t have to see Deepak Chopra and Dr. Phil
outselling him a thousand to one. Those things hurt, not as a
matter of fame or money, but as a matter of influence. Isaiah
didn’t write for fame or money, but he wouldn’t have wanted
to see his prophecies ignored in favor of the Celestine
Prophecies, or the prophecies of Bill Gates. Why? Because his
prophecies were true, from the mouths of the angels, and because
Bill Gates is a schmuck who uses Leonardo’s drawings to sell
computers.
For the individual artists, these
unfairnesses are a personal tragedy, but for the culture the
tragedy is even greater. In the past, the real artist was often
ignored but rarely buried. Think of Van Gogh. Van Gogh, though a
personal tragedy of epic proportions, was only a temporary loss
to society: he was eventually unearthed. But now the possibility
of such a life has been diminished to the point of extinction.
Real artists are not just undiscovered now, they are eradicated.
Van Gogh, born now, would be born into a world of TED lectures
and Getty Center pamphlets and MOMA propaganda and New York
Times OpEds and ARTnews magazines and Vagina
Monologues and FoxNews and CNN and Oprah and American Idol and
Dancing with the Stars and the whole ubiquitous smorgasbord of
shit and shite that passes for contemporary culture. He would be
brought up in one of these perpetual kindergartens of agitprop we
call public schools, where he could be indoctrinated from the
cradle by the Pentagon and the CIA, hanging yellow ribbons every
time some soldier farts in the Middle East. He could graduate
from there into some college where the football team gets a
billion dollar endowment for free weights, the business school
hires three thousand instructors for thirty thousand undergrads,
and the humanities department is held in a tent under a tree. He
could join the art history department, which places five thousand
graduates in administrative jobs throughout the country, or he
could join the art department, which is held together by duct
tape. In this art department, which has no easels or chairs, he
would be left alone of meddling instructors, trying to mold him.
Instead, he would be free to blow his nose and scratch his ass to
any extent required by his genius.
I hope you can see that it is very
unlikely that our little Vincent would be the tragic figure we
know and love. No, if he wanted to “make it” in art, he would
have to be the faux-tragic fake artist, slouching about in his
laceless Doc Martens, pissing in the fire and throwing his feces
out the window. Every other month he would kick some cast-off
effluvium of his ersatz life into a pile and hit it with the glue
gun, then put it in a cardboard box and Fedex it to Gagosian or
PaceWildenstein, where they would mount it on an expensive flying
trapeze and dangle it from the ceiling, with flashing lights or
Tom Waits gargling in the background. One of our TED lecturers
could then plug it at the $6,000 symposium of the clueless, and
the market is complete.
This means that while art was rare
in the past, it is now endangered. Van Gogh was teetering on the
edge of an abyss at the end of the 19th century, but
now he would be leaning on the lip of the black hole. You can
teeter away from an abyss, with some luck and effort, but the
suction of the black hole is inexorable. The suction of
contemporary society—of which the TED lecture is only one
hose—has become a hydra-like vacuum, sucking every last
possibility of art and beauty and truth into its maw. But you
will not hear this fact in any of these consortiums of genius,
since the extinction of the artist has been no accident of
culture, no committee oversight. These fake geniuses are the
beneficiaries of this extinction, and they revel in it. You will
see no defense of art at TED, only the subtle grin of the
usurper.*
*See, for example, Lee
Smolin’s defense of democracy in a lecture that is supposed
to be about physics. Science is not democratic, and only a poor
thinker would want it to be, just as only a short person would
want basketball to be democratic. But Smolin cannot tell his
squishy audience this: they do not want to hear that.
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