The Good Men Project BY NOAH BRAND August 2013
It’s bred into your blood for literally a hundred thousand generations. Use it.
It’s another beautiful dawn on the veldt, two million years
ago. You’re an antelope. And something appears on the horizon, approaching at a
steady lope. As it gets closer, you recognize it as a dangerous predator. No
problem; you’re an antelope, and you’re built to run. You take off in a burst
of speed that would blind most species, and the predator recedes toward the
horizon.
Except that when your sprint ends, it’s still coming…
But the predator’s still coming, and it catches up to you.
And it’s got a knobbly stick in one of its gripping limbs, and you’re how that
particular homo erectus feeds its family that week.
Nothing can beat it. Nothing can fight it. Some things can
outrun it but that doesn’t matter. Because there’s no hack for “doesn’t ever
quit” and so nothing on your veldt can compete with that two-legged,
goofy-looking predator and its unbeatable strategy.
That strategy is called persistence hunting, and there’s
strong evidence that it’s how we, humans, evolved as a species. That it was our
first great advantage over the other species, the one that kept us going when
the Smilodon and Eohippus gave way to better, more efficient models. The
dinosaurs became chickens, and we became as gods. And it wasn’t language, it
wasn’t binocular vision, it wasn’t even opposable thumbs. (Not that I’m
complaining about the thumbs. They’re terrific.)
Our first superpower, our greatest, is and always has been
persistence. When the antelopes ran away, we just kept going until we caught
them anyway. When the earth froze over and nothing could live, we just kept
going until we found spring again. When climate change killed every member of
our species except a population the size of a small town, we kept going and
thrived anyway.
If you are alive and reading this, you are the heir of two
million years of not quitting.
Before we mastered language and learned to team up better
than anyone, before we mastered weaving and made the baskets that made us the
best hunter-gatherers in the universe, before we mastered agriculture and built
cities and invented civilization, we had one hack, one exploit, one superpower
that made all the rest possible.
Soon, very soon, probably even today, you’re going to want
to quit. You’re going to want to just stop wasting energy on this stupid thing
and just let it go. It’s okay. That’s a perfectly normal, human thing to feel.
But when that happens, try this. Picture an antelope
receding across a veldt faster than you can run. You’ll never be as fast as the
antelope, and it knows that. It thinks it’s safe, it thinks you’ll starve,
because you can’t outrun it.
I’m not saying you can outrun it. I’m saying you can outlast
it. And if that weren’t true, you wouldn’t be alive to read this.
You are better at not quitting than anything that has ever lived on this planet. Just remember that.
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