The “Nihilist Penguin” and the Man Who Found It
Like many of you, I was captivated by Herzog’s lone penguin. The one that breaks from the herd and heads in the opposite direction. This singular image of defiance seems to be the hallmark of its observer who captured this image, Werner Herzog.
Herzog was born in Germany in 1942 and grew up in extreme poverty and isolation in post-war Bavaria. From an early age, he was obsessed with nature. In 2007, he traveled to Antarctica to film the documentary Encounters at the End of the World, exploring scientists, isolation, and existential questions.
During filming, the crew noticed a penguin separating from the group. It was seen walking away from the ocean and heading inland toward the mountains, a place of no return and no food. Even when scientists caught it and brought it back to the colony, the moment they turned their backs, it started toward the mountains again.
A Symbol of Rebellion
The internet was recently up in arms over whether the penguin was a hero or had simply resigned to its fate. It has been nicknamed the “Nietzschean” or “Nihilist” penguin.
While I don’t know what the penguin was thinking as it walked toward certain death, many of us identified with it, felt sad for it, and discussed the optics endlessly. Regardless of whether this “mad” penguin was faulty or enlightened, we can’t help but see it as a symbol of rebellion.
Thousands of penguins march toward the ocean to survive, eat, and reproduce; meanwhile, this one sets its course toward the vast nothingness.
Finding Your Own Path
Something shifts in us when we see the starkness of its journey. We identify with that desire to reject the flock and throw ourselves into the heart of the unknown. We want to reject the “ocean” of our familiar comfort zone, to seek the distant mountains.
See, I am not asking you to be a rebel without a cause. I am asking you to consider your own metrics for success and happiness. Reject groupthink and choose your own path. I hope you make all the riches you want, but I also want you to ask yourself: are you living a rich life?

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