In today's American parlance, or kidspeak as I call it, everything
worth mentioning is either awesome or it sucks. As with some aspects of
American politics there's not much in between the extremes of cliche
description, although of late some things have become less awesome and
more epic. Perhaps the kids are growing tired of awesome as they grow
older, some of our kids being in late middle age these days.
Anyway,
I have the bad habit of noticing trends and processes in things and I
noticed a sign just the other day, advertising a church down here in the
Bible belt -- a church where they provide "Epic Worship."
It's not that epic is a bad or lesser word for what goes on in churches. The Bible after all is truly an epic:
an historical and poetical narrative or tradition. For those who
worship the Bible or the characters in it, the experience might indeed
be awesome in the true sense of the word if I might be permitted to
suggest that words have true meaning or history.
Perhaps
awesome has lost a bit of its panache, having effectively replaced a
large portion of the vocabulary although, like the other cute, cliche
manifestations of eternal youth and hipness we cling to, perhaps not.
Such things have an extraordinary life span, after all. Backwards hats
are entering the second half century of cutting edge semiotic splendor
seen at the country club as well as the convenience store dumpster late
at night. Who knows how much longer things will be awesome or how much
longer we'll be content with saying it as though we were Oscar Wilde
uttering some fresh, novel and awesomely trenchant witticism. I suspect
one of those syncritisms we see when we study ancient pantheons or
senescent dialects: Amun and Ra become Amun-Ra and gigantic and enormous
fuse together to make the user feel ginormously less illiterate.
In short, how much longer before we hear epawsome?