I love BIG BANG THEORY on CBS. The characters remind me so closely of so
many good scientist friends I have had over the years and as a self professed
“grown Up Nerd” the passions that they enjoy, and the uncomfortable situations
they get into seem all too familiar. In truth I can remember being even more
awkward than the gang are in dealing with what society likes to call “normal”
people.
NOTE: In a world where accountants geek out over “Game Of
Throne”, Tolkien movie gross millions of movie bucks and I have seen
NEUROMANCER for sale in the grocery checkout line I put to you that the term
NERD needs to be revisited.
Something that one of the “just passing through” characters,
Lucy, said kind of explains why I am sitting in STARBUCK’s just now. Lucy had such crippling social anxiety that
she decided to take action against it herself.
To do that she consciously set herself in situations that make her
uncomfortable. The best way to face the
dragon is face to face, not with your back to it.
Losing Jeff as we did has really set me to thinking about
what is and is not important to me.
Above all things is that I need to enjoy the life I have been given and
the way Jeff passed has given me pause.
He was younger than me…and he is gone.
I was privy to everything that he wanted to do, at least what he shared
with ANYONE, and I know how much of his song was left unsung when the music
stopped.
Along with Jeff’s passing something else that I have noticed
in the people I have known, both near (like my Father) and far (like my
invisible friends on FACEBOOK). When we
were young we were excited about everything, just the taste of a new drink or
the smell of strange place could set every neuron to quivering. When we were
also something that is becoming more and more rare in the world, we were
open. We were open to new thing and new
people and new adventures.
When your heart is open you can invite all manner of things
in, some might be bad it’s true but most of them are good. Like the Dali Llama I CHOOSE to believe that
the world is not so much good (or Bad) but rather it is neutral. How it affects us is based on how we choose
to interact with it, what we choose to let in. The trouble is that as we age we
change, for whatever reasons we close like a rose at sunset. Maybe it is armor
from all the bad things that happen to/around us. The why of it is not as important as the fact
that it happens.
When I was a child my parents did a lot of entertaining a
lot and they had a lot of rowdy, funny people as friends to be entertained. I remember specifically them throwing a
costume party and being chased under the hors d’eurves by a masked Doctor with
a giant hypodermic squirt gun (he turned out ot be our family doctor who felt
so bad for scaring me he gave me the squirt gun which I used for a lot of
summers after). As my folks aged though I watched them change, they closed
off. They didn’t go out to dinner with
friends as much, or even leave the house.
In the end my Dad wound up gaining a horrendous amount of weight until he
looked like a latter day Jabba the Hutt, perched on the end of the couch in his
terry cloth sport shirt and khaki shorts, smoking his Phillip Morris and
drinking his coffee. The formerly vivacious couple who laughed so heartily and
deeply when I was a child pulled the blankets over their heads and all I could
see of them was bathed in the glow of their TV sets.
I have seen this behavior to some extent in so many of my
friends over the years, pals who once bounced around a picnics at the lake or
swung out over rivers on ropes slow down, close off, go internal. They go onto the social networks and tell
themselves that they are still participating in life not realizing that calling
internet communities “social” networks is like assuming you know what the Taj
Mahal looks like because you have seen pictures of it.
That is not to say that things like TWITTER and FACEBOOK
aren’t fun or are invalid, far from it they have expanded our abilities to keep
in touch exponentially, but some of our monkey brains seem to have lost the
simple fact that it is a metaphor. It
seems to forget that FACEBOOK was visualized as a “virtual commons” and that
your “FACEBOOK Page” was originally called your “wall”.
Anyone who has ever gone to college knows that “the Wall” in
the commons is where you leave note for your pals on things that are going on
and where to meet up after class and such.
The “Wall” was a simple delivery method and the truth is that if you
found someone standing in front of the wall as longs as some people spend time
staring at their FACEBOOK “wall” you would think them some sort of stalker, or
at least in need of some sort of mental aid.
Another thing about a common is that when you are standing
in front of “The Wall” you might actually experience something that, as we age,
we experience less and less. You might
actually experience some physical contact and direct interaction. It could be
the brush of a shoulder or a simple exchange of smiles but no matter what form
it takes it is a simple reminder that we are not alone, that there is something
beyond ourselves.
I was first made aware of the potential for this long before
the Internet even existed. Clifford
Simak wrote a poignant story about it in the 1940s called THE HUDDLINGPLACE. I first read it in THE SCIENCE
FICTION HALL OF FAME and it has haunted me ever since.
Since Jeff retired I saw him start to fall deeper and deeper
into his solitude, deeper and deeper into himself. When we spoke about him finding work he often
said he knew he needed to do that because he did not need the money so much as
he needed the contact with other people.
He knew that he was by his very nature a shy person and that if he did
not have the force majeure of going to a job every day that he would not do it. Racing was a big part of his life, even after
I bowed out, but even that had begun to bore him. Slowly he had begun to pull the covers over
his head just as I had seen my parents had before him. One of our last phone conversation I had not
heard from him and I asked him why.
“I haven’t been doing anything so I didn’t think I had
anything to talk about.” Came the calm reply.
The things that attract our attention most in others, that
annoy us most, are usually a function of the failings we find in
ourselves. That observation isn’t an
aphorism, it is a simple fact. When I
got back from Austin I started a BLOG that I called “the Bucky Project” and I
did it because I didn’t really care for who I had become over the years and I
wanted to peel away the husk that was surrounding me (“Yanking my covers” as my
old girl friend Valerie used to say) in hopes of finding that goofy kid I once
was. Even though I didn’t keep that BLOG
up (I love blogging but I go through phases where I think it is fatuous and
narcissistic, which it is but what are you gonna do?) I have kept up that
search. The events of the last few weeks have only thrown aspects of it into
sharp relief.
I love my digital art, the act of doing it brings me
pleasure. To do it the best environment
is a dark room with an icy blue glow from all my monitors. When I have worked in offices with other
humans they often call it my “cave”, but it is where I am most productive. I
have come to realize though that it also something else, it is me pulling the
covers over my head. Like my Parents
did. Like Jeff did. I see people’s lives
like a timeline and, through my experience, I have learned what happens when
you embrace the covers and pull them over your head. The next stop on the timeline is
eternity. Even with my bad heart I am
not ready for that.
So here I am, pounding away on my MacBook and sipping my
Americano. True I had to put in my
earbuds and turn on my music to finish this piece because a gaggle of soccer
Moms took up residence at the table next to me.
What is the plural of Soccer Moms? Gaggle? Herd? Chat? Burble?
But I am out in the world and starting my day with caffine
and a simple reminder that the world is out there and I am a part of it. Maybe it makes me uncomfortable; maybe it is
not as ideal as my cave but no matter what it is better.
I can’t ‘splain why but it just is.

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