The Bastard And The Beautiful World File
The beautiful world is not the one we were born into. It is the one we assemble, piece by piece, from the wreckage of the old lies. And that work—the hardest and most joyful work there is—belongs not to the legitimate, but to the bastard. To anyone willing to say: I may not have been meant for this world. But I will make it beautiful anyway.
Think of every great artistic or scientific breakthrough. It almost never comes from the center of power. It comes from the margins: from the self-taught, the mixed-race, the queer, the orphaned, the exiled, the “illegitimate.” These are the people who were told they did not belong, and therefore had to invent a new way of belonging. They had to build a beautiful world because the one they were handed was ugly to them. the bastard and the beautiful world
Consider the psychological advantage of having no pre-assigned role. The legitimate child is handed a map: this is your family, your class, your future, your duty. The map may be false, but it is comfortable. The bastard receives no map. From an early age, they understand that the official story—of bloodlines, of deserved privilege, of orderly succession—is a convenient fiction. This is not bitterness; it is anthropology. The beautiful world is not the one we were born into