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One might wonder what
motivates a person to begin collecting cliches. Well, it was 1993 and I was
in my second year of physics graduate school. That would explain everything--grad
school makes you crazy--but there's a little more to the story. I was reading
a book called Maybe, Maybe Not, by the author of that tome of ancient
wisdom, All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten, Robert Fulghum.
When suddenly ...
I hit a chapter all about contradicting cliches. For example:
"The early bird gets the worm." But "Good things come to those who wait."
"Look before you leap." But "He who hesitates is lost."
Something about these contradictions struck me as odd. You see, cliches are
part of the collective common knowledge of our culture.
If you want someone to listen to you without thinking about it, just throw out some
cliches. Suppose you're a door to door salesman. You say, "Come on,
he who hesitates is lost." The person at the door won't say, "No, that's not
true."
It's common knowledge, of course it's true.
These little tidbits get past all of our filters. They are so familiar and
so accepted that we never question them.
But when you see contradicting cliches side-by-side you have to think about it.
And then you have to call into question everything you believe.
My own spiritual crisis ultimate led to the conclusion that truth is like an
elephant to a blind man. Depending on which part of the elephant he encounters,
he may think it's like a wall, a firehose or a rope. But the real truth is
all of those things put together.
When cliches contradict one another, it's not that they are wrong, or incorrect,
but that they are both a part of the truth. Truth is multi-faceted like a
diamond. And in the hands of a master, it will sparkle.
All we can do in life is strive to see more of the truth knowing that no matter
how we might try, we won't see it all. But the more we see, the more beautiful
it becomes.
Each cliche is one little facet of the truth. More cliches, more truth.
So I started a list of cliches, originally to find more contradictions, but I soon
discovered that other people were oddly (strangely, obsessively, perversely) intrigued
by cliches as well.
At parties, people would sit around me yelling out cliches and laughing like crazy
while I wrote as fast as I could.
The National Organization of Copy Editors which sends materials to all major newspapers,
wrote an article about my list.
Penn and Teller linked to my list on their website.
Numerous teachers and students thanked me for giving them the resource they needed
to complete their project.
The list lives on.
- Steve Lautenschlager, Ph.D. (I did eventually finish
graduate school.)
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