#PulpNonFiction News South Africa

#PulpNonFiction: On postalgia, purpose and progress

Bronwyn Williams says we have two choices, between the dangerous and prevalent postalgia, abandoning ourselves to the present or progressing towards the future with purpose...

It’s hard to look ahead when we are trying to survive the present. It’s hard to imagine enjoying standing outside in the refreshing summer rain when we are in the middle of cold, dry winter. It’s hard to think about what the world could - and more importantly should - be like when we eventually emerge from the all-encompassing cocoon that has enveloped the world in 2020.

However, if we want to have a say in what that new world will be like, we need to have an idea of what it is that we actually want.

#PulpNonFiction: On postalgia, purpose and progress

The plague of postalgia

In my work, as a trend analyst and futurist, I have become increasingly aware of the dangers and prevalence of postalgia. Postalgia is a term coined by the science fiction writer William Gibson. Postalgia is similar to nostalgia, only while nostalgia is a longing for the distant and disappearing past, postalgia is an abandonment to the present. Postalgia sets in when we start to believe that this, the here and now, is as good as it gets. Postalgia is dangerous in that it is essentially nihilist. If you believe that tomorrow will be no better, or worse, worse than today, there is no point in planning for the future, and no point in living for anything other than short-term amusement.

As such, societies plagued with postalgia turn to escapism - be that through substance abuse, doomscrolling on social media, or virtual reality - rather than on conscious future plans for progress. Postalgia can affect individuals who lose faith in their own futures; businesses who seek to extract short-term value rather than investing in long-term returns, and nation states that perpetually steal from the future to placate the needs and demands of the present population.

In other words, postalgia can be seen to set in when we lose our purpose; that is, when we no longer have anything worth progressing towards.

The power of purpose

I had these ideas in mind as I re-read the newly-released The Power of Purpose: How to Obliterate Obstacles and Triumph Over Impossible Adversity by Richard Wright this week. (I had the privilege of reviewing the manuscript when it was still in its first-draft format, but this was my first look at the finished product). In the book, Richard shares his (very personal) story of how he managed to find a purpose to get up and work towards every morning, even as he was (successfully, spoiler alert) battling stage for brain cancer. In Richard’s case, the primary purpose that got him to push past the postalgia and the nostalgia and keep progressing towards an uncertain future was his family (he has two young daughters). More symbolically though, Richard also found a tangible purpose to push towards, by pursuing a series of gruelling Iron Man races, and giving new meaning to the metaphor of getting back onto the proverbial bike, no matter what life throws at you. And the bike is a poignant metaphor indeed; to ride a bike you have to keep moving forward, you cannot stay still (or you’ll fall over).

And that is really the point. We have two choices: we can get stuck in today, in the endless present and end up in a future that we did not plan, participate in or choose; or we can look to the future with purpose and arrive there on our own terms. The choice is ours. Postalgia or purpose? Which do you choose?

About Bronwyn Williams

Futurist, economist and trend analyst. Partner at Flux Trends.
Let's do Biz