Part 14 (1/2)
When he carries this to extremes--as the person with a huge head and tiny body is likely to do--he often overlooks the question of the practicability of the thing he is planning. He inclines to go ”wild-catting,” to dream dreams that are impossible of fruition.
Thought for Thought's Sake.
- He will sit by the hour or by the day thinking out endless ultimates, for the sheer pleasure it gives him. Other men blame him, criticise him and ridicule him for this and for the most part he does fail of the practical success by which the efficient American measures everything.
But the fact must never be forgotten that the world owes its progress to the men who could see beyond their nose, who could conceive of things no one had ever actually seen.
This type, more than any other, has been the innovator in all forms of human progress.
The Dreamer.
- ”Everything accomplished starts with the dream of it,” is a saying we all know to be true. Yet we go on forever giving all the big prizes to the doers. But the man who can only dream lives in a very hostile world. His real world is his thoughts but whenever he steps out of them into human society he feels a stranger and he is one.
Doesn't Fit.
- The world of today is ruled by people who accomplish. ”Putting it over,” ”delivering the goods,” ”getting it across,” are a part of our language because they represent the standards of the average American today.
The Cerebral is as much out of place in such an environment as a fish is on dry land. He knows it and he shows it. He doesn't know what the other kind are driving at and they know so little of what he is driving at that they have invented a special name for him--the ”nut.”
Doing isn't his line. He prefers the pleasures of ”thinking over” to all the ”putting over” in the world. This type usually is a failure because he takes it all out in dreaming without ever doing the things necessary to make his dream come true.
A ”Visionary”
- These predilections for overlooking the obvious, the tangible and the necessary elements in everyday existence tend to make of the Cerebral what he is so often called--a ”visionary.”
For instance, he will build up in his mind the most imposing superstructure for an invention and confidently tell you ”it will make millions,” but forget to inform himself on such essential questions as ”will it work?” ”Is it transportable?” or ”Is there any demand for it?”
Ahead of His Time.
- ”He was born ahead of his time” applies oftenest to a man of this type.
He has brains to see what the world needs and not infrequently sees how the world could get it. But he is so averse to action himself that unless active people take up his schemes they seldom materialize.
What We Owe to the Dreamers.
- Men in whom the Cerebral type predominated antic.i.p.ated every step man has made in his political, social, individual, industrial, religious and economic evolution. They have seen it decades and sometimes centuries in advance. But they were always ridiculed at first.
The Mutterings of Morse.
- History is replete with the stories of unappreciated genius. In Was.h.i.+ngton, D. C., you will have pointed out to you a great elm, made historic by Samuel Morse, inventor of the telegraph. He could not make the successful people of his day give him a hearing, but he was so wrapped up in his invention that he used to sit under this tree whenever the weather permitted, and explain all about it to the down-and-outers and any one else who would stop. ”Listen to the mutterings of that poor old fool” said the wise ones as they hurried by on the other side of the street. But today people come from everywhere to see ”The Famous Morse Elm” and do homage to the great mind that invented the telegraph.
”Langley's Folly”
- Today we fly from continent to continent and air travel is superseding land and water transportation whenever great speed is in demand. A man receives word that his child is dangerously ill; he steps into an airplane and in less than half the time it would take trains or motors to carry him, alights at his own door.
Commerce, industry, war and the future of whole nations are being revolutionized by this man-made miracle. Yet it is but a few short years since S. P. Langley was sneered at from one end of this country to the other because he stooped to the ”folly” of inventing a ”flying machine.”
The Trivial Telephone.
- Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone. But it was many years before he could induce anybody to finance it, though some of the wealthiest, and therefore supposedly wisest, business men of the day were asked to do so. None of them would risk a dollar on it. Even after it had been tested at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia and found to work perfectly, its possibilities were so little realized that for a long while no one could be found to furnish the funds necessary to place it upon the market.
The Wizardry of Wireless.
- Then after the world had become accustomed to transacting millions of dollars worth of business daily over the once despised telegraph and telephone it took out its doubts on Marconi and his ”wireless telegraphy.” ”It's impossible,” they said. ”Talk without wires? Never!”
But now the radio needles pierce the blue from San Diego to Shanghai and from your steamer in mid-ocean you can say good night to your loved one in Denver.
Frank Bacon's Play.
- Ideas always have to go begging at first, and the greater the idea the rougher the sledding.
The most successful play ever put on in America was ”Lightnin',” written by Frank Bacon, a typical Cerebral-Osseous. It ran every night for three years in New York City. It has made a million people happy and a million dollars for its sponsors. But when Mr. Bacon, who also plays the t.i.tle role, took it to the New York producers they refused it a try-out. But because he had faith in his dream and persisted, his name and his play have become immortal.
An Ideal Combination.
- The ideal combination is a dreamer who can DO or a doer who knows the power of a DREAM. Thinking and acting--almost every individual is doing too much of one and too little of the other!
The World's Two Cla.s.ses.
- The world is divided roughly into these two cla.s.ses: those who act without thinking (and as a result are often in jail); and those who think without acting (and as a result are often in the poorhouse).
To be a Success.
- To be a successful individual today you have got to dream and then DO; plan and then PRODUCE; contemplate and then CONSTRUCT; think it out and then WORK it out.
If you do the latter at the expense of the former you are doomed to work forever for other people, to play some other man's game. If you do the former at the expense of the latter you are doomed to know only the fringes of life, never to be taken seriously and never to achieve.
Pitfalls for Dreamers.
- If you are inclined to take your pleasure out in cerebrating instead of creating; if it suffices you to see a thing in your imagination whether it ever comes to pa.s.s or not, you are at a decided disadvantage in this hustling world; and you will never be a success.
Pitfalls for the Doer.
- On the other hand if you are content to do what other men dream about and never have dreams of your own you will probably always have a berth but will never have a million. You will exist but you will never know what it is to live.
The Hungry Philosopher.
- The extreme Cerebral can sit on a park bench with an empty purse and an empty stomach and get as much pleasure out of reflecting on the ”whichness of the what and the whitherness of the wherefore” as an Alimentive gets out of a planked steak. Needless to say, each is an enigma to the other. Yet most people imagine that because both are human and both walk on their hind legs they are alike. They are no more alike than a cow and a canary.
His Frail Body.
- The extreme Cerebral type finds it difficult to do things because, as we have seen, he is deficient in muscle--one of the vital elements upon which activity and accomplishment are based. This type has little muscle, little bone, and little fat.
Deficient in ”Horse Power”
- He is not inactive for the same reason that the Alimentive is; his stomach processes do not slow him down. But his muscles are so undeveloped that he has little inward urge toward activity and little force back of his movements. His heart and lungs are small, so that he also lacks ”steam” and ”horse power.”
He prefers to sit rather than to move, exactly as the Muscular prefers to be ”up and doing” rather than to sit still.
The Man of Futile Movements.