Live as if

When I was a teenager going to  Christian Youth Fellowship, there was this girl who was both very pious and very 60s era liberal. Liberal Christians seem like a weird idea now in this era of conservative Christians but “Jesus as the ultimate hippie” had a lot of appeal to the Boomer parents who were part of my Methodist church.

Anyway, there was this one time where, I don’t know how it came up, but the youth pastor (or maybe one of the pious girlls, not like quite sure) said something that has really stuck with me ” this as if you were going to live forever but die tomorrow..” I have since come to understand that it’s a misquote of something misattributed to Ghandi that actually comes from a Renaissance Humanist (I think, not important).

It sticks with me because of a Kevin Nealon joke on SNL’s “Weekend Update”  about this sentiment:

… And then I just waste the rest of the day

And then much later on in my life, I would think about how the Doctor mixed the last night of River Song’s life be 24 years long. Or an even earlier joke that I heard on “LA Law” but I have said many times in my career which is, ” If I only had a year to live, I would want to do this job because everyday can seem like a thousand years”

I think about how at this point I blog maybe once every couple of months but if we go back to the very beginning, I’ve been formally blogging since 2009, and I’ve been doing stuff like having my .plan file (it’s a Unix thing ) be blog-like since the early ’90s.  The entire time I’ve used about my death as if it were just around the corner. And it hasn’t been. And it won’t be. Until it is.

The most profound insight on this actually came for my daughter, who mourned the impending death of her cat for the entire time she was in college. But she graduated college and her cat was very old but still alive. She said that at some point she stopped being afraid of when her cat would die, and just be thankful for the time that she had with her cat.

To a certain extent being afraid of death is really about being afraid of life. But that is to too simplistic.

For you see, I do often prepare for the end knowing that the end is not coming but hypothetically considering what can it do to make the moment worth it. It’s just that, what makes the moment worth it can often be incredibly commonplace. Sarah Silverman does a stand-up special about how her stepmother and father died within 9 days of each other. In his last days, amongst the things that Sarah Silverman’s dad did was binge watch all the episodes of the Ali Wong series “Beef.” I have a close friend whose dad a terrible stroke that left him very disabled, and he spent the last days of his life watching “The NFL today”

This is what they mean when they say ” stop and smell the roses” or ” Life is what happens when you’re busy making other plans”

A life worth living can absolutely be filled with ordinary moments. You’re not ” killing time” you are just living gently.

Which brings me to the point: for people my age, advice on how to live your life like ” live as if if you have been invited to a sushi buffet. Love as if you are a character from the Amelia bedelia books. Saying as if you’re a contestant on a reality game, show in a foreign country and everything you’re saying has been overdubbed into the native language.” What I hear, and perhaps it’s a Gen X thing is as if

“as if” is Alicia silverstone’s hilarious retort lots and lots of absurd platitudes being presented to her in Amy Heckerlings adaptation of “Emma.”

Moreover, for me, it tells me that although people strive to find the metaphors which give insight and clarity into the substance behind the symbolism in their life… Most of the time they don’t find metaphor they find simile

As if it were possible to find ontological truth…

S’yeah right… And maybe monkeys will fly out of my butt! Party on, Wayne. Party on Garth

Out of time

I had dinner with my daughter yesterday. She now knows this blog exists but isnt sure she wants to read it. I can’t blame her. TL:DR, right?

Seriously though, as the clock ticks down, I recognize that I have lived a life that has been profoundly out of step with my time.

too late or still too soon...

For sure that’s true but ironically, it may turn out that I will be seen by progeny and history as an unsympathetic, even despicable character. There is certainly enough there to condemn me for all time.

That said, I am reminded of a story that I revisit from time to time:

When I was four, Santa Claus came to my preschool, sat down in a chair, told us a story and then gave us all thoughtful gifts. I can still recall that I got Spiderman colorforms. It was as awesome as it sounds.

I was so happy about the experience that I told my family at dinner.

[INT – Dining Room]

DAD: That was not Santa Claus, that was Mr.Peters”

ADULT ME (V.O): Now Mr.Peters owned the preschool and ran it with his wife, Mrs. Peters. I knew him very well. Santa Claus was not Mr.Peters

KID ME: Dad, I saw Santa Claus with my own eyes. I swear .

DAD: You just don’t understand what you saw. There is no Santa Claus. Your mother and I buy all the presents and you should be more thankful and less self-centered. Honestly, you need to recognize that Santa Claus is just a social construct to encourage generosity, but you kids these days are all so entitled that you miss the point entirely.

ADULT ME (V.O): I looked around at the hard eyes of my older brother and mother. My truculent brother always talked back to Dad and my too clever mother always used rhetorical trucks to undermine and humiliate my Dad. Now, in this time when they could use their powers to defend Santa Claus, both were silent. My Dad had said an inarguable truth, to which there was simply nothing to say.

[end scene]

What a revelation to have! The tremendous power of the truth, it will silence all critics! Then what followed was the further realization that my father used the truth out of a spiteful jealousy of my enthusiasm for a gift given to me that he felt was useless and somehow harmful to my moral development. Dad watched the hurt sink in and then turned his attention to cleaning his plate with voracious zeal; adding the rare compliment for my Mom’s excellent cooking. The topic turned to boring adult stuff and soon I was excused

Soon I realized that I was surrounded by fools. By the time I got to elementary school, I could count on two fingers the people smarter than I. The rest were delusional in their ignorance. They couldn’t name the nine planets. They couldn’t count to a million. They didn’t know the rules to Chess or contract bridge. They hadn’t watched “I, Claudius”. Their parents voted for Reagan. But the most obnoxious evidence was that despite it being an obvious lie, they all believed in Santa Claus.

In first grade, we saw the Rockettes Christmas Spectacular at Radio City Music call . On the bus ride home, they got excited because on every corner, they saw a Salvation Army worker dressed in a Santa Suit. Each one was the real Santa to those fools. They didn’t appreciate being called fools and told on me. When the teacher came to yell at me and I calmly said, “Teacher, explain to these fools that there is no such thing as Santa”

“What ever do you mean?” asked my first grade teacher, who exchanged looks with the other teachers that I now understand to be side-eye. Another teacher added, “Of course there is Santa Claus. Why would you say such a hurtful thing in front of all your friends?”

“How dare you! My mom is a teacher, like you, and she swore to teach facts. You are a disgrace to the profession.”

Silence. I had done it! I had done just like my Dad. Like Mozart, I must be a prodigy.

I was left alone for the rest of the bus ride to savor the victory. For some reason, however, my first grade teacher was noticeably tougher on me after that. Also: somehow, I was the only student who she forgot to give a cupcake to on my birthday. Maybe because it was in June.

I recall that in second grade, I wished someone a happy birthday at their party with “So now that you are 7, you are old enough to recognize the truth of their being no Santa Claus.”

Was this the only thing? No. I was blessed with the physique and aggression enough to seek fistfights as a way of silencing criticism. And I was emotionally dysregulated enough to emulate my father and get combative on small triggers. And callous enough to retaliate against being called rascist names by making fun of the fact that some kids had alcoholic parents who neglected them. And just in general, leaning into a taste for ad hominem attack. Morally, it was not only correct but required that people ought to be yelled at for their frequently concurren stupidity, cruelty, and vainity.

Did all of that start before the Santa Claus incident? Hard to imagine a three year old misanthrope, but it would also be unfair and comically reductive to say this all happened because my Dad ruined the myth of Santa.

What is more accurate to say that this sort of fundamental misunderstanding by my parents of what is an age appropriate conversations to have with your children was the norm. The Santa debunking was a dramatic trauma thing that has a clean narrative arc and can lead to many moral lessons, but it’s hardly an isolated example.

All this is a long way of saying that I have often found myself out of step with my age group cohort and with the zeitgeist. So, I speculate that history will not vindicate me, but rather will condemn me further. If the stupid majority has hegemonic influence over the narrative now, then surely they will write history.

“But think of the children! Can’t they tell a different story?”

They could if there was one. Part of my musing is that even in writing my own history, I grade myself something like a C- for “Not repeating the terrible things your parents did.” Such that the most generous version I can muster is that “Here lay a man who realized that, for his children’s sake that he ought to go against his own bad habits and self-destructive learned behaviors, and about 71% of the time was able to do so. C-“

Thanksgiving after the apocalypse has faded from memory

It is hard to believe that a few short years ago, human life almost ended due to a respiratory illness that had no cure.

At the time, I predicted that we would survive, find a cure, and come out of it. But I was certain the prognostications that we might become:

Wiser

Kinder

More unified

And prepared in a way that this could never happen again

… Would all be so, so wrong

Sadly, I am not only correct on the first three but so correct that the opposite has happened in a big way.

But I cook a really fantastic Turkey now, and I go out of my way to make it for my family in Thanksgiving. In this way, a small way… I can hope that some of of may yet become wiser, kinder, more unified, and prepared in a way that strengthens our resilience.