Life Works is an ad hoc, alternative and occasionally aspirational approach to everyday life. Drawing on a combination of sense, sensibility and ancient wisdom it shows the relevance of mythic themes and archetypal figures to the modern world. Jane Bailey Bain teaches mythology in West London. Her book 'LifeWorks' was published in January 2012. For more information and further postings, visit the main LifeWorks site at http://janebaileybain.wordpress.com/

Tuesday 23 February 2010

Odysseus

Odysseus is one of the great heroes of our time. OK, so he lived around 3,000 years ago on a small rocky island west of Greece; but his story is still one of the best around. Ody wasn't much of a hero to look at: short, bandy-legged, squash-nosed and with a head of red hair that marked him out for trouble. When he set off home after the fall of Troy, he hadn't actually done anything wrong - the murder and pillaging wasn't his fault, though he opened the gate to the looters: his guilt lay in his complicity. But he took nearly ten years more to get home. Even when he was within sight of Ithaca, he fell asleep and let the boat blow off course: bit of a Freudian slip, that. So Ody visited a couple of nymphs, though they didn't mean anything to him; and managed to lose all his mates to various misadventures. He might have been a king, but he showed less restraint than a teenager out on a Saturday night binge. That is the basis of his enduring appeal: on his travels, he lives out the life that we are too scared or inhibited to try. And he tells us that it wasn't so much fun after all: there is no place like home, beside his loyal wife. But Penelope is more that a match for Odysseus. She ruled for twenty years in his absence and is just as quick-witted. Old Ody isn't allowed back into their bed until he has proved himself. The Odyssey doesn't tie things up neatly: but then, neither does life....

Monday 8 February 2010

Synchronicity / Serendipity

Funny how you just know sometimes. That this is the right way to go about things; that you were meant to be there;  that someone can be trusted.  Some people call it instinct; others say its just subliminal perception.  It can manifest as synchronicity (*), or serendipity (**), or anything else you like to call it.  but sometimes you do just know. 
I had that feeling today, as I typed in the last word.  I had hoped and planned that it would be, but I do tend to be a perfectionist:  it's hard to draw a line underneath and say good enough.  I infuriate friends in pubs, searching desperately for a napkin to write down the perfect phrase which has just occurred to me.   But today I just knew that I had reached the end of this particular stretch of road. 
So... 'Life Script' is finished!  This is the final version, and it's complete. As it says in the Rubiyat (current exhibition at the British Library, if you're interested): turn down a glass for me! 

* Syn-chronicity:  together-happening; when two apparently unrelated events occur at the same time. 
** Serendipity:   finding precious things unexpectedly by pure luck: often used of junk shops!