All through out my twenties I thought I was Franz Kafka (July 3, 1883- June 3, 1924). He was skinny, tall, introverted, alienated, intellectual, dark-skinned, well dressed, nervous, dramatic and Jewish. So was I. Kafka had a deep longing to be a writer and so did I. He loved literature, his sister, women, exercise and hated his job- just like I did. Kafka had a father, Hermann Kafka (1852-1931), who was a huge, dominating, worldly, loud, overbearing, oppressive and successful business man- just like mine. Kafka wrote “Letter To His Father” in which he spoke of being profoundly affected, both physically and psychologically, by his father’s authoritative and demanding character. I could have written the exact same letter to my father and I often did (I would copy Kafka’s letter and put some sentences in my own words and then mail a shorter version of “Brief an den Vader” to my father). So many things seemed to indicate to me that Kafka was just like I or I was just like him. I deeply related to his short stories and read and re-read his novels America, The Trial and The Castle. His novella, “The Metamorphosis” felt like the perfect metaphor for my life.
One of the difficulties of aging is that as years pass one begins to realize the misguided thinking of ones youth. One sees how much of their behavior was a fervid rebellion or unorganized folly against parents, orthodoxy and attempts to control- no matter how much one thought their behavior was authentic, ideological and revolutionary at the time. The joys of youth are hidden in its naivety, in youth’s ignorance of the root cause of behavior (I miss those days). As I have traveled through my thirties and am nearing my forties (shedding some of the anger and idealisms of my youth) I am beginning to realize that I am not like Kafka at all. At least I don’t think so. On the 18th of June 1906, Franz Kafka received his Doctorate of Law. He went to work for a large Italian insurance company where he worked for a year before quitting. Then he found a job with Worker’s Accident Insurance Institute for the Kingdom of Bohemia where he worked for the next fourteen years of his life. I have never worked this long at any job with such uncompromising dedication as Kafka- nor would I want to. Kafka was a diligent and reliable employee although he often complained that he “despised the job.” His father often referred to his son’s career choice as “Brotberuf,” literally meaning “bread job,” a job done only to pay the bills. I would never want to imagine living like this.
I am not a Zionist. I have difficulty relating to those who are. It is not clear if Franz Kafka was a Zionist (I think he was) even though he sympathized with the Jews whom he thought deserved a homeland in Palestine. I have very little sympathy for Israel whose government and military is committing and has been committing for years daily human rights violations against the Palestinian people. Kafka would certainly not condone Israels current militaristic behavior but we would certainly have differing opinions about the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and the Jewish diaspora- were Kafka alive today. Even though there is not a lot of “Jewishness” in Kafka’s literary work- Kafka was very interested in Yiddish Theatre and Yiddish Literature, whereas I find these two art forms incredibly dull. Judaism does not appeal to me as it did to Kafka. Kafka read the Talmud daily and the few times that I have tried to read the Talmud I have fallen asleep.
Kafka was a very spiritual man and so am I. However, Kafka’s spirituality was very philosophical whereas mine is metaphysical, almost verging upon the new age. Gustav Janouch, who would often visit Kafka at work and then record the things that they talked about (which was later published as the book “Conversations With Kafka”) said that Kafka was a saint dressed in businessman clothes. Kafka often spoke about the virtues of patience. I have a tendency to be impatient. I have always wanted what I want now but Kafka once said, “Patience is the master-key to every situation. One must have sympathy for everything, surrender to everything, but at the same time remain patient and forbearing.” Kafka was simply talking about the Buddhist idea of “letting go and being in the moment.” Unlike Kafka, who is said to have been a master of being in the moment, I am almost incapable of spending more than a minute or two in the “now.”
Kafka once said to Gustav while they where on a crystalline autumn day walk, “there is no such thing as bending or breaking. It is a question only of overcoming, which begins with overcoming oneself. That cannot be avoided. To abandon the path is always to break into pieces. One must patiently accept everything and let it grow within oneself. The barriers of the fear-ridden can only be broken by love. One must, in the dead leaves that rustle around one, already see the young, fresh green of spring, and wait. Patience is the true foundation on which to make one’s dreams come true.” I happen to completely agree with this sentiment. I often practice this way of being myself and talk about it with others. The major difference between Kafka and I is that when I say something like this to people they look confused or take me for a new age freak. But when Kafka said the exact same thing- it gets recorded and written down in a book! I am not complaining, nor am I jealous of Kafka- I just recognize that Kafka and I obviously have very different ways of enunciating and expressing our ideas.
I have always enjoyed working nights or staying up late into the night. It is strange to me that Kafka would say something like, “working at night is very bad for one’s health. And besides you tear yourself out of the human community. The night side of life becomes the day-side for you, and what is day for other men changes into a dream for you.” I find this strange because I know that Kafka would often return home from work at three or four in the afternoon, take a nap, eat dinner and then write until late in the evening. He had to be at work before the sun came up, six days a week, and he would very often only sleep two or three hours a night because he would stay up slaving away at his stories or novels. I myself often work as a waiter when I cannot find any other way to make economic ends meet (also one benefit to working as a waiter is that I can have my days free to write, paint, read or do whatever I want). I enjoy the nighttime hours that allow me to feel separate from the normalized nine to five “human community.” A writer is often an outsider anyways- and my work as a waiter often confirms my outsider status. Kafka may disagree with my chosen line of work and tell me that I am selling myself short or that it is bad for my health to work late into the night- but I could easily turn the situation around and call him a hypocrite.
No, I am not Kafka. Sure, if someone compared our biographies they would find superficial similarities. Kafka was a health nut and so am I. Kafka was continually dependent on and exhausted by his fathers support, so am I. Kafka had issues with sex, intimacy and choosing between the writing life and the domestic life- so do I. Kafka liked to draw, so do I. Kafka prayed, I meditate. Kafka loved the streets, palaces, gardens and churches of the city where he was born and I love the rolling hills, smells, trees and avenues of the city where I grew up. Kafka was too shy and reserved for friendship and sometimes I think I am as well. Kafka talked about the coming age where the world would be populated with robots, catastrophe, bureaucracy and “chains that can not be broken because there are no chains that can be seen.” I am living in this age. Several years before the holocaust occurred Kafka said “we live in a morass of corroding lies and illusions, in which terrible and monstrous things happen, which journalists report with amused objectivity and thus- without anyone noticing- trample on the lives of millions of people as if they were worthless insects (Fox News comes immediately to mind).” I feel like the same thing could be said about the world in which I currently reside. But even with all these similarities between Kafka and I- I am no Franz Kafka.
“Man does not grow from below upwards but from within outwards. This is a fundamental condition of all freedom in life,” Kafka said to Gustave one day as he was buried in paperwork that was stacked up in piles on his desk. The room in which Kafka worked was filled with rows of desks and Gustav sat in a chair besides Kafka’s desk listening to him talk. “It is not an artificially constructed social environment but an attitude to oneself and to the world, which it is a perpetual struggle to maintain. It is the condition of man’s freedom.” Gustave could not help but think that Kafka could be an enlightened being hidden away in the machinations of the bureaucratic work-a-day world. I myself need to find an “ordinary” job so that I can afford some financial security in my life. Like Kafka’s dreams, my dreams of being a writer have not quite worked out and lately, I have been realizing how much my consciousness or my thoughts determines the reality that I experience. I am starting to get glimpses of how it is my attitude or way of perceiving that creates my reality. As much as my intellectual mind wants to disregard this spiritual truth- I am starting to understand how this is really works. But still- this does not make me Franz Kafka.
Through out my twenties I never saw Kafka as a guru or a beholder of deep spiritual wisdom. Now I do. Instead I saw him as an existentialist- a victim of a society that constantly tried to tear him away from his art. I related to Kafka’s struggle against his father and his constant attempts to be taken seriously as a writer by his family, friends and the surrounding world in which he lived. Kafka only had a few short stories published in his lifetime and was virtually unknown as a writer and human being. Kafka would often go to soirees or intellectual gatherings and read his stories out loud to those few people who were willing to listen. I, on the other hand, keep a blog in which I write stories and essays for the few people who are willing to read my work. Kafka struggled to balance his literary aspirations with his career, his parents and his relationships with women- I do the same. Without question- Kafka suffered and struggled through out his life to create the body of literature, which is now known as some of the greatest writings of the twentieth century. Even though he demanded that all his work be burned upon the time of his death- his friend Max Brod ignored this final wish upon realizing how great his writings really were. I myself would never want my work destroyed after my death and I have every intention of being a well-respected writer long before I am gone.
I am not Kafka? No I am not. The more I write the more I become more aware of the naivety or mistaken thinking in my twenties. Maybe one might disagree with this because the superficial similarities between Kafka and I outweigh the differences. Kafka slept with his window open, and so do I. Kafka believed in the power of prayer and so do I. Kafka tried hard to please his father often sacrificing his true self- so do I. Maybe I am Kafka and maybe I am not- but it is pretty clear to me that I am not. Above my desk hangs a picture of Kafka and a quote from Kafka that I read every day. It brings me comfort and validation to know that someone from the distant past understood the truths that I believe in today. The quote says, “Just be quiet and patient. Let evil and unpleasantness pass quietly over you. Do not try to avoid them. On the contrary, observe them carefully. Let active understanding take the place of reflex irritation, and you will grow out of your trouble. Men can achieve greatness only by surmounting their own littleness.” After reading this I always take a deep breath, hold it and think, no I am definitely not Franz Kafka. Then I exhale.
You are definitely not Franz Kafka. Which is good, I have already read all of Kafka’s work but yours is an ongoing and fascinating adventure. I recently discovered I am not James Joyce which is a great relief seeing as how he has been dead for so long.
Thank you Paul! Funny, now that I think of it you do have aspects of Joyce in your writing style and character- but I am happy that you are not him since if you were then I would not have the good benefit of knowing you.
Although your wrote this post in a seemingly dejected way, as if you intellectualized and made an objective contrast and comparison analysis, do you have some tinge of being a failure for finding a difference not between you and Kafka, but between the present you and the you in your 20s?
I am twenty, and I am dithering through the same useless anxiety which many others have experienced. On the other hand, I was told–I am continuously told–that everything shall pass, that there is an age where we shall be at that maturation level where life has a meaning. A part of me says that “they” are right. In the end, however, the advice which I usually get is not the one I tend to follow.
Randall, you might not remember me, but all I have to say is that I’ve been following your blog since its inception. I am not as well read as I wish I were, but I can say that you’re one of my favorite writers. I enjoy most of your postings. Hopefully you shall find the perseverance and get some of your things published.
Sajins! It is good to hear from you. Thank you for this very wise and insightful comment. I will try to respond in a way that I hope makes some sense. I do not think that I feel like a failure because of the differences between who I am now and who I was in my twenties as much as I feel much different. Getting older has been kinda like taking a nice long exhalation. Even though I prefer where I am now in my life as opposed to where I was in my twenties I think what I miss is the feeling of immortality and idealism that I once had. In my twenties I was very inspired by certain literary personalities that I wanted to emulate- but now that I am 38 I am dealing more with simply coming to terms with who I am and trying to be okay with this- as it is. Also the older one gets the more difficult it is to hang on to youthful dreams- but it can be done and I plan on proving this. So no- I do not feel dejected as much as I feel happy to know that I am not Franz Kafka- anymore. I am I now. I still have the same anxieties- but I know how to handle it a bit better. But you are right- I do intellectualize much too much…..
“Everything does pass”, but then there are new things to take its place. The twenties are a VERY challenging time- but things do get easier and better. It is like riding a bucking horse- the more you do it the more you get the feel for it. We are our own bucking horse and by the time we get to our mid-thirties we have better control and more skills to handle the horse and calm him down. I will say that life gets better even though life is always at its best right now- wherever you are, however old one may be. It is just a matter of realizing that in this moment everything really is perfect. Don’t lose hope!
You made my night when you told me that I am one of you’re favorite writers! Wow! Not many things feel better to hear…and I thank you from my heart for that gift. I to hope that I get published one day soon. It will not be the end of my problems but it sure would make things a bit easier upstairs in my mind where I spend so much of my time.
I hope what I have written makes some sense to you. I send you my best wishes and look forward to hearing about your journey as you continue to grow.
It it easy to share an advice. The one who does this is not that different from a blathering politician. I don’t believe that people change. Even if they have the capacity to change, they are able to do it only slightly. A man-hater in his twenties will be potential man-hater in his 30s, 40s, and so on.
The moments of insight that you tend to experience make a difference only for the next hour or two. Then, as you probably know it, your turn back to your real self. Finding out that you’re not Kafka does not break the chains of anxiety or the dependence on such material things as money, job, etc. Yes, it is a relief. But it is short-lived. Like peeing on a bush after a twelve hour trip in a train with no toilet in it.
You’re just lying to yourself. You’re Kafka. You are a reliable employee in the eyes of your colleagues, you are a guru when it is warranted to give an advice to someone, and you are going through the same anxieties when you’re alone. You are not a Zionist or a nationalist, but this is hardly makes a difference between the two of you.
Interesting perspective- even though I completely disagree. I am not sharing advice with you, I am sharing my experience. But you have the freedom to think whatever you want and I have no need to change you or how you feel. If this is how you want “to think’ and “be in the world”- then go ahead, you have that right. All I know is that I am a work in progress, and everyday I get a little bit better, happier, calmer, healthier, stronger. Sometimes I slip- but I always get back up, brush myself off and try again. After enlightenment, then the laundry…so the saying goes. This is the best I can do.
But I must be honest- your comment does remind me of a small voice that I have in my head. I often say similar things to myself. As I get older and more aware of certain habits this voice lessens- but it is still there. This is why I suppose I go on meditation retreats, do therapy once a week, read spiritual texts and so on- all attempts to chase this negative voice straight out of my head.
I never read Kafka. I heard a lot about him growing up, as I did many others like Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Chekhov, Marx, Russell, etc. but I never made an attempt to read them. I thought (and still think) I dont have the intellect to understand what they are seeing or saying; that if I read, it will be ambient noise and words and their meanings will drip on the sides of my head like water on a buffalo’s back.
Hindsight is always 20/20, so yes, we will look back on our youth with a sense of disdain or a sneer, for the impulsive naivity we had, but that was necessary to lead us to where we are right now. Could we have made better choices? Sure, an elder told me “Theres ALWAYS room for Better”, I agree, Better, like money has no Limit, its never enough. I am about your age too, and the view from my moutain says “We have different struggles at different points in our life, all we can do is walk through it” . I like that last quote, it makes sense to me, now I need to find the courage to get past my inertia and manifest my thoughts/dreams/being.
You may not be Kafka(which is good cause I read you, unlike him). But, you are All of You. Have a good day and Enjoy the weekend Randall(presuming that is your name from the comments above). 🙂
I always enjoy the things you have to say. Your insights are very helpful and wise. I do think you would understand Kafka- at least “The Trial” and “The Metamorphosis.” These books are deeply filled with meaning that I think you could relate to. If you get a newer translation they are easier to understand.
“We have different struggles at different points in our life, all we can do is walk through it” This is so true! I am working on simply accepting everything as it is- without it needing to be different. Just to be with things in there “realness.” Aint easy cause my mind wants things different- all the time! But it is true once we attain something “Better” there is always room for more better!! It is endless and even though finding a better job, a better place to live and a better bed to sleep in might get my parents and wife off my back- there will always be something better that I can do. It is endless!!! So I am embracing the moment, learning to love life as it is, to consume it and be satisfied in it. If I had started working on this in my twenties- no doubt I could of been spared the health challenges and psychological challenges I deal with today but when I look back on my life- I really would not change a thing.
You have a good weekend to my friend and I will be here when you come back with something “BETTER” to say:)
Good to see you again, Randall,
Have you considered that you were not supposed to know Kafka as well as you do? Most of what we have from him was published posthumously by his wife and backstabbing best-friend.
On his deathbed, he pleaded with his wife and pal to burn his unpublished work, which was, he maintained, terribly unfinished and unfit for anything but firewood. His wife and friend swore oaths to him as he died. The friend then convinced Mrs. Kafka to publish the work, which I’m fairly certain included “Metamorphosis.”
It’s a fun philosophical conversation to kick around over beer-talk: whom do you back? I back both conflicting points of view, but that’s because I’m cross-eyed.
So there you are: any resemblance born of reflection upon his work is fatally flawed. Isn’t that fascinating?
Always a pleasure to stop by, Sir. Hope things are well with you and yours.
Peace and Pedantry,
-Both