Paradise · Complete
The final challenge of any paradise is the paradox of its maintenance. When a paradise is established through isolation, it often becomes stagnant or oppressive. In Morrison's Ruby, the elders’ commitment to a fixed past creates a rift with a youth that seeks progress, illustrating that a "frozen" paradise cannot survive the march of time. True paradise may only be achievable not through rigid isolation, but through understanding and acceptance of the changing world around it.
: The ability of the mind to find value in loss and transform setbacks into new adventures. Paradise
Contrastingly, many thinkers argue that paradise is not a place to be found, but a perspective to be cultivated. In John Milton’s Paradise Lost , Satan famously declares that "The mind is its own place, and in itself / Can make a Heav'n of Hell, a Hell of Heav'n". This philosophy posits that external circumstances—whether one is in a literal garden or a "hellish" struggle—cannot dictate one's inner peace. This internal paradise is characterized by: The final challenge of any paradise is the
: Remaining in possession of one's "inner life" regardless of physical isolation or age. True paradise may only be achievable not through
