Helen Keller was an American
author who was left deaf and blind after an illness in early childhood, living
in a state she described as "darkness and stillness". Her life was
profoundly transformed by her teacher, Anne Sullivan, who taught her language
by spelling words into her hand, an experience Keller called her "leap
from bad to good". She went on to attend college and became a celebrated
author, publishing her famous autobiography, The Story of My Life, as
well as Optimism: An Essay. In these works, she explained her belief
that true optimism is not based on "ignorance and indifference" but
on a "willing effort always to cooperate with the good" and a
deep-seated "religion of optimism".
In the first part of her
essay, Helen Keller establishes that the desire for happiness is a universal
right, sought by everyone from philosophers to ordinary people. While many seek
it through external means like riches, power, or art, most define it by
"physical pleasure and material possession". Keller, who cannot
"hear or see," immediately challenges this definition, stating that
if happiness depended on physical senses, she would have "every reason to
weep". Instead, she introduces her own optimism as a "philosophy of
life" born from her unique circumstances.
Keller's optimism is not
naive; it is a direct result of her "leap from bad to good". She describes
her life before her education as "darkness and stillness” and “without
past or future". She further says that "love came and set my soul
free". When her teacher spelled a word into her hand, her "heart
leaped to the rapture of living". With that first intelligent word, she
"learned to live, to think, to hope". Having escaped such profound
"captivity", she argues, makes it impossible for her to be a
pessimist.
She then defines this true,
earned optimism against a "false optimism". She warns against the
"dangerous optimism of ignorance" that simply ignores evil or makes
rash patriotic claims while overlooking "grievances that call loudly for
redress". Such a belief, which "does not count the cost," is
like a "house built on sand". True optimism, she argues, must
"understand evil and be acquainted with sorrow". In fact, she insists
she could only learn the "beauty of truth and love and goodness"
through "contact with evil".
Keller develops this idea by
reframing evil as a "sort of mental gymnastic". The "struggle
which evil necessitates" is, in her view, one of the "greatest
blessings" because it "makes us strong, patient, [and] helpful".
Her optimism, therefore, does not rest on the "absence of evil, but on a
glad belief in the preponderance of good" and a "willing effort
always to cooperate with the good".
This leads to her central idea
that "the desire and will to work is optimism itself". Drawing on
Thomas Carlyle, Keller defines work as the force that "brings life out of
chaos," creating an "order; and order is optimism". The purpose
of labour is not to forget misery but to actively "Work out the
Ideal" within the "miserable Actual". She stresses that humble
work has immense value, citing Darwin, who laid new "foundations of
philosophy" in "diligent half-hours", and the historian Green,
who noted that progress relies on the "aggregate of the tiny pushes of
each honest worker". Keller embraces her own role, which is to fulfil her
humble tasks and "rejoice that others can do what I cannot".
Keller concludes by defining
her philosophy as her "religion of optimism". It is an unshakeable
"trust" in the ultimate "beneficence of the power" that
governs the world, whether one calls it "Order, Fate, the Great Spirit,
Nature, [or] God". By making this force her "friend," she feels
"glad, brave and ready for any lot Heaven may decree".
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