"To the people who think, the world is comic.  To people who feel, the world is tragic." Horace Walpole

"Sometimes I am thinking, and sometimes I am feeling." Ralph Maltese

"Sick people have such deep and sincere attachments." Blanche Dubois

 

Remote Control

Remote Control

My father-in-law, like my own father, in fact, like most fathers of the Great Depression generation, was not fond of add-ons.  When asked why he would not include an ice cube maker in the purchase of his brand new refrigerator, he replied, “One more damn thing to break down.”  I did not achieve his wisdom until I reached his age when he made that comment, and therein lies one of the great frailties of the human race—the inability to pass along what we have painstakingly learned to the younger humans in the hope that they will avoid the pitfalls we fell into.

Take our recent challenge with our communication system.  We have a landline as well as two cell phones, one for Polley and one for me.  This is a system which our children consider totally irrational since they see no need for a landline. They use their cell phones to conduct research, settle arguments, play music, entertain themselves with games, and, occasionally talk to friends and family.   I predict that, in the not-too-distant future, all newborn babies will have a cell phone surgically inserted under their skin and connected to the cerebral cortex.  This need to be connected to the rest of the universe every second of every day is, I believe, a genetically engineered desire designed by a collaboration of telecommunication systems and Madison Avenue.

Our landline was modest by most standards, but it still had some add-ons which we rarely used.  For example, we had a Caller ID log, a tracking of who called us.  Because of the Corona Virus Pandemic, we don’t leave home very often, so if I did not answer the phone it was because I did not want to be solicited by the “How to Get Your Hearing Aids Replacement Center,” or I chose not to pick up the phone when the Caller ID identified the caller as Warranty Are US who warned me that my car warranty was up and I could renew it for a mere $500.  Why would I want a log of these calls?

I also rarely used the Intercom system.  I felt it was better for my cardiovascular system if I just got up and walked to the staircase and shouted down to Polley in the kitchen for any information I needed to share with her.

Then there was the Call Blocking System which I infrequently employed simply because it was too complicated to execute.  I was fearful of inadvertently blocking any messages from my doctors about the status of my health or any missives announcing my winnings from the Publishers’ Clearing House.

So, despite the fact that I did not incorporate many of the add on features of my telecommunication device into my daily life, the phone still started to break down. Our system included four headsets.  One day the phone in the kitchen started screaming out for recharging.  We made certain it was appropriately nestled in its holder, but still it shouted out, “Battery Needs Charging!”  “Battery Needs Charging!”  “Battery Needs Charging!”  I looked up in the Trouble Shooting section of the manual how to address this problem (the fact we could find the manual was a cause for celebration!), and the only solution was to buy a new battery.  So I did.  Several days later I inserted the new $20.00 battery, but still the Kitchen Phone still screamed out for energy.   “Battery Needs Charging!”  “Battery Needs Charging!”  “Battery Needs Charging!”  We tolerated this annoyance for about five minutes and then mercifully pulled the plug on Kitchen Phone.  We were down to three headsets.

Not too long after Kitchen Phone’s demise, Family Room Phone developed some sort of lung disease or throat soreness because when one of our children called, they heard static on their hightech cell phones.  Often the only solution to this issue was to have Polley return their calls on her cell phone.  A teenage attendant manning the drive through orders of a fast food chain provided more clarity and less static than Family Room Phone.  Essentially we were down to two phones.

Bedroom Phone developed a tactile problem.  When we tried to answer an incoming call, pressing the “ON” button, the one with the green icon of a phone being answered, did nothing.  It was like shooting a blank.  We soon learned that if one of us pressed the longest fingernail we had into the right upper corner of the ON button, we could answer the call.  This was not the ideal situation.  Imagine a 2 AM call, one of those much feared calls in the darkest hours of the night, and one of us struggling to answer by aiming our fingernail in just the right position.  Bed Room Phone was not reliable in emergencies.  Essentially we were down to one headset, and this was in my den which was not the most convenient location for easy access to answering our phone.  I bit the bullet and ordered a new phone system.

The new phone system had more add-ons than the old phone system—standard.  Connecting the new phones was easy.  We collected all the old phones and piled them on the end table in the family room.  The New Sapphire Deluxe System had a RoboCall blocking system.  If someone called us, our phone would tell the caller to press one of the keys on their phone.  A robocall obviously can’t do this, (sort of like the captcha on websites) so it would be blocked.  But in our high pressured culture where time is a very expensive commodity, we felt we might be imposing on friends and family to take the extra microsecond to press the key so the call would go through.  On page 943 of the manual it provided a way to prevent this.  If the caller was listed in our directory, then they would not be challenged by our Call Blocker.

So I spent two and one half-hours entering the names of friends, relatives, physicians, accountants, pharmacies, manicurists and other contacts we considered integral to our well-being.  Amazing how so many of our time saving devices consume so much of our time.   While I entered the data into our new phone system, Polley gathered up the old phone system and threw it into our trash bin next to the garage.

About an hour after we settled in waiting for our new phone system to ring, it rang.  We hoped beyond hope that it would be a robo call, so we could wring our hands like the Wicked Witch of the North and watch it be rejected.  And our dreams were answered.  One ring, our all Galactic Call Blocker determined through its fool proof screening system that it was a robo call and rejected it.  We sighed and crawled back into our books.

Another hour later, our eyes weary, we agreed to turn on the television and watch MSNBC.  We looked around and could not find the television remote.  Panic began to set in.  I don’t think I know how to turn my television on without the remote!!!  I do not know if I can.  We searched every room in the house, including the most illogical places, like the basement.

I could hear my father shaking his head in disappointment.  “So, you can’t watch television, eh?  In my day we didn’t need images.  We made our own as we listened to the radio….Gangbusters, Jack Benny, The Shadow.  And when we finally got a television, to change the channel we actually had to get up out of the chair and go and turn the dial.  Yes, we had to stand up and walk over to the tv set to change from Farther Knows Best to Gunsmoke.

Then we would sit back down until your mother said, ‘I can’t hear it.’ And one of us would have to get up again and actually walk over to the tv to increase the volume.

And we did it, without complaining.  It was good exercise for us.  But you and your candy ass generation are too dependent on remote this and remote that.  You sit in your comfy cushions and change from Keeping up with the Kardashians to Love After Lockup.  What are you going to do now?  How are you going to watch The Price is Right now, smart guy?”

What was I going to do now?!!  Polley and I retraced our steps for that afternoon, and the revelation came that possibly, just possibly, she might have picked up the television remote when she gathered the handsets to throw in the trash.  To her credit, she retrieved the plastic bag from the garbage bin, brought it into the kitchen and started sifting through the discarded coffee grounds, wet tea bags, used napkins, year old refried beans that we had just discovered in the freezer, and damp sugar substitute packets.

There….at the very bottom of the trash pile, lay the television remote.  I cleaned it off as best I could.  I still caress it gingerly with my thumb and forefinger, promising my remote I will never throw it in the trash again…until we get a new television.

 

Life has settled back into the New Normal.  We have fewer phone calls now, especially in the middle of Jeopardy, and I have to get my exercise in other ways, like on a stationary bike, but I look forward to the days when I can tell my wide-eyed grandchildren, “Yes, indeedy, in my day, we had to use devices called remotes to change channels and change volumes and everything.  We didn’t have no fancy-schmanzy voice controlled everything, where you just tells your device to do something and it does it.  the only exercise you get is for your vocal cords. No sirree, in my day we actually had to do a lot of clicking in them days. It was good exercise.”

We Are History

We Are History

There are days, weeks, years, shards of decades that I cannot recall with any great clarity.  But I remember with the clearest of vision a slightly chilly but sunny Friday one autumn when I stood on the corner of Walnut Street and Day Avenue in Ridgefield, New Jersey.  With me was one of my senior classmates, Jack.  We just stood there, not knowing what to say or what to believe.  What had just happened was beyond belief.  It could not possibly have happened—not in the present, not in modernity.  The day was November 22, 1963.

Just two hours earlier Jack and I were sitting in study hall in the high school cafeteria, and my biggest challenge was not in the upcoming history test, but in mustering the courage to ask Rose out on a date.  Then the principal came on the loud speaker.  “We have received news that President John F. Kennedy has been shot in Dallas, Texas.”  All heads looked up from their books. Ten minutes later, again the loud speaker.  “We have been told that President John F. Kennedy has died.  We are dismissing school early.”

Jack and I stood for at least two hours on the corner of Walnut Street and Day Avenue trying to come to grips with the fact that we were part of history.

“Jack, things like this, assassination, happen in history books.  Not now.  I can’t believe it.”

Jack shrugged his shoulders.  “What happens now?”

It was my turn to shrug my shoulders.  Filled with the sense of incomprehension, Jack and I finally separated and went home to quiet kitchens, quiet family members, quiet everything except for Walter Cronkite, CBS anchor man delivering the updated news on what happened in Dallas.

My parents and younger brother were in the kitchen watching the one television we shared.  This was not always the case.  My father was a very skillful electrician.  Many years later, I learned from one of his shipmates that my dad had helped save the LST he served on in World War II.  Apparently the ship stopped dead in the water, and this meant that without the protection of the convoy, the ship was a prime target of tailing, stalking Japanese submarines.  My father jury-rigged the electronics of the vessel and got it moving again.  A product of the Depression, my dad thought it wasteful to spend good money on a television, so as a side job he repaired other people’s boob tubes.  In the Bronx we would have three or four sets in different states of repair.  A Philco with sound but no picture.  A Zenith with picture but no sound.  A Crosley with a tuner you turned to just the right spot so that the snow was replaced with something resembling an image.  Sometimes in order to watch a program, we had all three sets going at once.  Eventually when we moved to Ridgefield, my father broke down and bought a second hand RCA (black and white, of course.)

We had three major stations, three networks, and that was the magnitude of our choices.  Later UHF came in which expanded the variety, but not really by much.  And somehow, some way, this affected the way we lived.  There used to exist a phenomenon called “Water Cooler Conversations.”  People in an office would take a break and meet at the water cooler and discuss last night’s news or popular television show.

“Hey, did you watch the Honeymooner’s last night?”
“Yeah.  Art Carney stole it with the Chef of the Future bit.”

“Yeah, I laughed till I cried.”

“Take in Carson last night?”
“Yeah.  Ed Ames throwing the tomahawk and hitting the target in the groin?”
“Yep.  And Carson said, ‘You can’t hurt him any more than that.’”

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“See on the news Krushchev banging his shoe.”

“Yeah.  He’s gonna ‘bury us.’”

“We should nuke his ass.”

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The point is that we all shared the same news, the same entertainments because the choices were limited.  Bad thing?

Things are different today.  I wonder if there are any water cooler gatherings, especially since people bring their own favorite brands of plastic bottles of water?

I remember news anchors like Walter Cronkite, Douglas Edwards, John Cameron Swayze, but they all seemed to cover the same news and pretty much from the same angle. When was “spin” invented?

I bring this up because of a phrase that President Biden used in his inaugural speech.  He said we needed to “unite” as a country.  I agree with him on the necessity of doing so, but I wonder if it is possible?

We seem as a people to be divided up by fractions and factions.  One subculture believes in the need to combat the Covid virus.  Another subculture believes the virus is a hoax.  One faction expresses the need to preserve democratic institutions while another group holds fast to idolatry.  One parcel of Americans believes in a stolen election while another thinks that belief to be a big lie.  One faction holds sacred the Constitution while another seems willing to abrogate the law to satisfy its own ethos.

And the worst part is that psychology tells us the hold a crazy idea has on people is directly proportionate to how many people believe it.  It is harder to eradicate the mistaken idea that the moon is made of blue cheese if 80 million people believe it than if only 1 million believe it.  Recent studies have also demonstrated that the more reasons given for the fact that the moon is NOT made of blue cheese only serves to make the blue cheese believers hold even more steadfastly to their mistaken idea.  So what this does is curtail or eliminate dialogue entirely.  If I am trying to convince my neighbor that the moon is not made of blue cheese, all I am actually accomplishing is strengthening his belief that it is made of blue cheese.

The truth or any objective truth appears to be shattered amongst the variety of social media available to support what we want to be the truth.   The moon is not a satellite of the earth.  It is whatever our favorite cable channel says it is.

So what is there to unite our nation?  What do all these factions have in common?  What commonality can we build on to unite us?  Can the common denominator be the irony that acceptance of diversity itself is a uniting element of American culture?

We don’t all eat the same foods, enjoy the same entertainments, or believe in the same institutions.  Can we define or even describe “American culture?”

If I try to build a bridge to a person who does not believe in vaccinations or climate change or the legitimacy of the presidential election, or the rights of all people to the pursuit of happiness, then what materials can I use to build that bridge?

Ultimately I think the need to belong is stronger than the truth.  Better to be accepted by a small group of narrow minded thinkers than to embrace the concept that diversity is a strength from which all of us benefit.  Not all of us are secure enough to cope with change.

Following President Kennedy’s assassination the depth of the tragedy was felt, I believe, by most, if not all, Americans.  That feeling was palpable.  This is not “things were better” in the old days piece. The sixties had its own stage of racial turmoil, and gatherings around the office water cooler did not usually include women.  As young people we failed then, too,  to understand that every present will become the past, that history occurs every day, that, as Amanda Wingfield cautions her son Tom in Tennessee Williams’ play, The Glass Menagerie,  “You fail to remember that the future becomes the present, the present becomes the past, and the past turns into everlasting regret unless you plan for it.”  The very present we live in will become history, and how do we prepare for that?

The domestic terrorism evident in the storming of the Capitol on January 6th, was an historical moment that should have united us in its condemnation since it stabbed at the heart of American democracy.  Yet the outrage was not universal.  A number of us crawled back into our caverns of conspiracy theories and false rumors and fears of those not identical to us.  How do we draw them out of their self-imposed, tribal, philosophical bunkers and onto common ground?

Do we, as a people (or should I say “peoples?”), share any common ground?  Common culture?  Or are we crammed into a limited space bound only by geography?