The ability to change your mind.
I have found myself increasingly comparing myself to a machine, and it probably has been my responsibility for a ton of misery made for me and solely by me.
Why?
Because in every approach I take, I wonder to myself if it is the most efficient way. I neglect what brings some manner of actual self interest, self investment, because I’m scare that it will be inefficient; and I conflate for me, this fear of inefficiency with inadequacy.
The problem, I’ve found, is my choice to pick my own metric of efficiency in approaching new situations and habits and learnings, even if it may be because I see this is the metric that is popular perhaps to others around me, without considering the cost of such a choice: consequent feelings of self-failure, inadequacy with the experience of measuring up to more efficient ways, and especially, the single fact that working this way, I’ll always feel lost against a real machine.
Because, I’ve found, a machine may carry out some part, an output or a way or designation of undertaking towards a output, but that’s not the same thing as conflating it with protection against the unknown. It cannot be the same thing, as a person might not choose to do things as efficiently in the way he’d compare himself to a machine, but this opens himself up to the chance of possibility; across time, he does not really ever know if he’ll choose to do differently and question his choice and courses in a later context or environment.
On the other hand, a machine carries that output, of course, perfectly: well, maybe, but that is in a vacuum. It’s on paper.
Everything goes perfectly until the rules of the game change completely, because the form of efficiency only takes itself seriously under one particular constraint, one particular instance of circumstances, localized in that moment in time. A person isn’t that; I realized that through our inefficiencies, precisely because we are that way, we are really able to take ourselves through different environments and courses and manners of action in a way that may not be perfectly suited to the place or to the time at hand, but that variation paves the way towards things which a machine really doesn’t keep in mind.
That is because, as is self obvious in the words themselves, machines don’t have a mind, so they have nothing to adjust their outlook to, like a rearview mirror. There is nothing to change. And when a machine holds nothing to change, that also really means there is nothing that can let them choose something new and abandon their old ways of doing things; somethjng actually mechanical and isn’t capable of deciding for themselves with real, actually real, independency. With nothing to be changed, something that is wholly mechanical can seem with an illusionary way to commit itself wholly, but it can’t be meaningful commitment, when there is no mind to change to begin with. It’s nothing.
I’ve found thus, that I can’t compare how I choose to do things with the criterion of a machine, despite how it may look on the surface, with society so valuing outputs in a way that examines ways retroactively, in a backwards-facing manner, simply looking back in an attempt to find whatever ends makes or re-creates the ideal designated output wanted.
The process, instead of being valued then by such a form of society, is ultimately and sadly neglected; it becomes a way among ways, measured against whatever is ultimately looked at as ‘necessary’ or ‘prudent’ to achieve whatever output necessary. When I want to eat a prune, I don’t want to see how I go about getting it; I google these answers to find the easiest way possible.
It’s the easiest fucking way possible. There’s no corners to cut because there are no corners. Without corners in a life treated as something smooth without edges, efficient ways takes a straight line to goals and destinations without thinking to pause or to consider that it itself really wants to, if the choice is the hypotenuse and the right angle, take the rectilinear corner towards the coffee shop, and not judge itself for wasting time or for conserving time.
What this means is that efficiency, while saving time, minute fractions of energy or other short term resources, ultimately robs of us of our ability to decide for ourselves.
When I decide to go ahead and measure myself by some way that is more efficient, I’m really also, without my even being aware of the fact happening in front of me, choosing too to neglect that opening, and too soon foreclose that possibility that maybe I want to take the long way.
The chance to take the long way is the chance to decide, something that output maximizing doesn’t care about, can’t, in fact, care of, since it goes the way that matters to that outcome. But because I failed to see this, I also couldn’t reach the simple fact that planning, for example, the perfect ice cream place to take a girl I like suddenly matters less when I go there and she is in fact sick, from the cold weather, or the place is overcrowded, and the outcome of that delicious and thoroughly researched split suddenly becomes meaningless, and suddenly doesn’t matter anymore.
Then, in this stupid hypothetical scenario date, I can decide to change my mind and take this imaginary yet regardless beautiful and wonderful woman to somewhere else instead, like a peanut aisle or a cookie store.
My preferences change because I’m a human, and therefore by nature a little bit fickle and unreliable, and in judging my actions and outlooks overly too far by the misnomer that says that the process is a consequence of the result forecast, something I will lose myself with every time to in a comparison to an actual machine or program with strict designations precisely aimed at such a thing, like a robot crane arm manufactured by white coat engineers in a desert designed to carey out the execution of moving barrels of oil.
Machines are predictors and maybe accurate weather vanes at finding and meeting a target, but when we adopt that same mindset, we lose our capacity rather that we have and machines don’t: the nomer of volition, which means that with our minds and the fact that we can look forward and also look backwards, when a freak storm hits or something obsoletes whatever makes one thing efficient and another not, we can choose, again, through our own understandings and significations, to go another route again, even if it is another square in a circular world.
I cannot win against a machine. But a person is not one. A machine always goes the easiest way because that is its nature; that is its programming. So do we program ourselves to learn that the path of least resistance should be the norm we set ourselves against, and learn to naturalize ourselves towards?
That can’t ever, ever be the case so. Whatever we map as efficient, that will wear down when the map no longer becomes what the terrain really is, because the terrain is mutable by nature and the map, once set, isn’t. The map loses itself to time and nature, and machines continue to try to find that path of least resistance, a stone settling down to the bottom of the pond only, while a human learns to embrace the value and virtues of suffering, and can know that difference between what is water and what is virtue; while so, the stone only sinks.
Even if things at the moment make it look important that one does things by the most efficient way possible, that is only at that moment, and other people do not include what matters more than what they can only see, and that is something self-awareness can be referent to: the human prerogative to do what is optional, and only just so. A mechanical and purely robotic being survives by its efficiency. We, solely in spite of, and perhaps, only simply and solely as reason because we are otherwise.

