Finally, I have found the proposal video that will take your breath away. With this, I end this little journey.
What I have learned is the following:
1. These videos, at their best, are records of a moment where everything else falls away, where your entire consciousness is in your throat, where the only thing on earth that matters is right now, right here. This is the moment, as David Blaine says of his endurance work, that “takes away the ego” and “puts you in a position so intense that the ordinary ‘I’ doesn’t exist anymore”, where you are called to “live truthfully in a given moment…and feel completely alive and awake at one specific moment.” In my first post on this blog, I quoted Jeff Buckley: “There’s only ‘present’ and ‘absent’. That’s it. It’s the balls, just the utter deathlessness, fearlessness.” For all of us, this is the moment we cannot fake, cannot possibly be false for. All of one’s life before should lead up to this moment, and all of one’s life after should be an effort to become worthy of the person you implicitly promised to be in that moment. Remember Godard: I said I love. That is the promise. Now, I have to sacrifice myself so that, through me, the word ‘love’ means something. As a reward, at the end of of this long undertaking, I will end up being he who loves.
2. The proposals that are most moving are not the most clever or the most populated with family or the most Graustarkian. What is most moving is watching a person — even if only for a solitary, fleeting moment — become something bigger than they are: they become love itself. These proposals are not great because they are sweet, but because they remind us all of who and what we really are.
3. In the truly great videos, the woman’s response is visceral — you can see that it completely takes over her body, where she instantaneously abandons grocery lists and errands and industry conferences, abandons even the ability to control her hands or, most powerfully in the following video, her ability to speak. The man is steady, fully present, vulnerable, and strong.
4. What makes the following video the most moving is the gravitas. While in a past blog post I’ve sung the praises of the utterly adorable ice skating girl for her total commitment to the moment, what I also realize is that her love is thorough, but thin. Even from where she kneels in total abandon, she is only capable of giving a certain amount; she hasn’t yet been hollowed out, hasn’t yet been left out to rot with the sky and the rain, hasn’t yet been called upon to be something larger than she is, to lead others, hasn’t yet failed at something that meant everything to her, hasn’t yet been successful at something she never thought she could, hasn’t yet reached into the lives of others to fundamentally alter them because of who she, uniquely, is.
Now, at the end of 2008, I can say I have been hollowed out. After this year, I have been left out to rot with the sky and the rain. I have been called upon to be something larger than I was at the time, to lead others, to create things where before there was nothing. I have failed at things that meant everything to me, and I have been successful at things I never thought it remotely possible that I could. I have reached into the lives of others, and, to quote Lauren quoting Koo, have left fingerprints on their appliances.
My final thoughts and the video are after the jump.
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