Our Questionable Progress

What is the world’s biggest problem? Perhaps it is our inability to keep up with it. The world, I mean.

Inventions are often touted as a means to save time. Conveyor belts in factories drive assembly lines, while escalators and elevators transport people up and down.

Inventors built cars, trains, and planes to make life easier. With what result?

Our bonus miles earn airport security evaluations, baggage checks, and a trudge to the gate. Fellow frustrated travelers become obstacles — things not human — as if intended to disrupt everyone’s pace.

Within our intimidating cities, rush hour now covers much of the day. The distance from your town to downtown has increased. Overflow traffic creates more opportunities for gawkers, rubbernecking, and those who simply gape.

Lanes get added, and more drivers fill them. Highway restoration due to overuse is ongoing. Choose your season: winter or road-repair?

Do we save time? We have more books, computerized PDFs, blogs, and essays; more announcers, critics, podcasts, and talking heads. Everyone has something to say.

How does one determine what is worth reading and which voices reward attention? How do we distinguish the essential from the inessential, truth from fiction?

The wealth of medical information is ever-expanding. Physicians are often hospital employees on their own treadmill of high-speed patient appointments.

To our benefit, they are experts in various categories of practice, including dermatology, radiology, cardiology, gastroenterology, and urology, among others.

For the sick person, however, an appointment becomes the first step in a slow-motion relay race to multiple practitioners, before reaching the right destination.

Way back, doctors used a chalkboard for patients to sign in and wait. They were admitted to the office in the order of their arrival.

Telephones, Zoom, email, and texting enable employees to be available and respond to communications at all times and from any location, whether at home or away.

The days of cow bells or buzzers to signal the start and end of the workday are long past. Sunrise and sunset suggest the time, but not your work schedule.

The machines drive us, the calls and messages haunt us, and spam inundates us. The speed of change, the slippery ground, and the madness of kings create our Age of Uncertainty.

Should seeking balance unbalance us? One begins with required tasks, but who can tell us what matters and predict the future we need to fashion a plan?

Houses of worship, parents, scientists, and teachers carry down-sized authority. The competitor chooses the tune and the boss leads the dance. The government sells a witch’s brew of domination, newly manufactured each day.

Many people are held hostage by their phones, drawn by the camera or a person on a call rather than the people nearby.

Does anyone treat selfie addicts? Life has become like a walk through Alice’s looking glass, then the next, then the next, as we search for ourselves and the days ahead.

Do we “lay waste to our powers,” as William Wordsworth wrote around 1802? Doubtless, we find new ways these days.

What do we miss?

Thinking, reading, and studying were typical on the ocean liners and railroad transportation of times past. Teachers required memorization of poetry by their public school students into the mid-20th century.

An ease of life not dominated by on-time performance was the human experience before clocks and trains made timeliness possible.

Personal expectation of clocked efficiency has become a stick for self-flagellation.

Reading old books allows one to learn something new with each reading, provided the material is well-chosen and relevant. Making music was once a common practice at home. Telling stories enriches both the speaker and the listener.

Not each acquaintance should be considered part of your network or the kind of person who will promote your future success.

Success, I repeat, or call it wage-slavery, as you wish. Evaluate its importance and the cost in human terms, and the gain or loss in joy.

Talking to and getting to know neighbors on hot nights outdoors would be novel. Everyone cheered the arrival of air-conditioned coolness, but such conversations disappeared.

The gated, guarded communities of today keep us further apart.

We must search beyond ourselves and see into the depths of another’s sadness, past what he cannot utter. Embrace this stranger, as Leviticus 19:34 of the Hebrew Bible reminds us.

Beware the much-needed, self-imposed distraction as a substitute for reinventing your life. Meditate, too—every day.

Take up sewing if it’s a new craft for you. Build something with your hands.

Eliminate tasks. Slow down. Say no. Learn more. Stand up. Beat back your fear. Do not try to please everyone.

Maintain old friendships and make new ones. Write cards or letters in cursive. Play chess.

Hug the people and animals you love. Speak of love with those you cannot live without. Speak of it with everyone.

Pray for them, too.

I don’t do all of these, and I’ve listed too many.

Escape the grasp of our mechanized, categorized, bullet-sprayed world.

The Chinese proverb tells us, “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.”

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The first image is that of A Nepalese Grandmother Preparing Food inside a Traditional Kitchen. This is an edited version of Mithun Kunwa’s work, as adapted by Radomianin and sourced from Wikimedia Commons.

The following item is Metropolis, 1917, a painting by the German artist George Grosz. Finally, Elephant at Sunset in Amboseli, Early November 2024, by the photographic artist Laura Hedien, with her kind permission, Laura Hedien Official Website.

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What I Have Learned so Far: Life Lessons, Part II

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Here is a second round of ideas about the process of living accumulated in a lifetime of observation and action — success, error, and reflection. My profession allowed me access to the thoughts and stumbles, ascensions and tumbles of thousands of folks. Some of my learning is crafted into the bits below. I published an essay on January 8 with the same title, labeled Part I. Perhaps there will be a third set after a while. Here goes the second one:

  • “Not everything that counts can be counted and not everything that can be counted counts.” Einstein most often gets credit for saying so, but the real author is William Bruce Cameron. So much for justice.
  • “Buddies don’t count,” as my friend John Kain says. He meant we should not keep score or expect perfect equity in any relationship. Close attention to a balance sheet will make us (and our soon-to-be former friend) miserable.
  • Know thyself” is inscribed at the Temple of Apollo. I never met anyone who understood himself completely, myself included. Self-awareness is a “more or less” commodity. We consume too much time preoccupied with what others think of us, analyzing why they did what they did, said what they said. One might more profitably endeavor to know oneself and do good in the world.
  • The ability to start over is essential. I counseled people who made dramatic career changes (from powerhouse attorney to clergyman, for example). I had to evaluate patients afresh to see if I was missing something or misunderstanding their makeup. We must occasionally wipe clean the mirror of our thinking and let ourselves be shocked or enlightened by our unphotoshopped image. As Max Weber suggested, whether we wish to or not, our lives will be influenced by how much truth about ourselves and the world we can bear.
  • To understand yourself you need to know your roots. Our ancestors survived, chose mates, and produced children. We inherited their genes and therefore possess the same urges. These forebears also had to detect who was like them and might be friendly, and who was different and might be dangerous. Fruit enabled survival, so we were handed their love of sweets. The creation of tools further enhanced the chance of staying alive. The ability to form cooperative groups helped, as well. Since they didn’t live long, the genes they delivered to us gave us instincts that worked for what we now think of as the first half of life.
  • A troubling aspect of evolution is that it enabled survival, not happiness. Happiness became the bi-product of human actions only if the emotion helped make sure the kids were born, survived, and thrived. The joy produced by love, for instance, bonded families and increased the likelihood the children would come to generate offspring of their own in time.

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  • We tend to think in terms of before and after: before and after school, before and after you left home; a first job, the death of someone you loved, a first sexual encounter, etc.
  • We don’t need permission from very many people. Asking “to be allowed” means you will hear “no” more than the guy who doesn’t. Such requests make you the hostage of waiters, your children, and people you will never meet again. Often it is OK to just do what you want. No one will stop or question you. The world, within limits, tends to adjust. A wonderful sense of liberation awaits.
  • We need to evaluate our default (automatic) tendencies. Some of us take action, others wait. Some routinely approach, others reflexively avoid. Our strengths can also be our weaknesses when applied to the wrong situations. Best to apply as needed, rather than by default.
  • Personality disorders cause us to rerun mistakes, like an old episode of a poor TV show. One is well-advised to recognize flawed life strategies — recurring behavior patterns contributing to our disappointments. We otherwise risk familiar and fruitless searches for the wrong people; too many or too few chances taken and, either ignoring tomorrow for pleasure today or focusing so much on tomorrow we miss the glory and opportunity offered by the new sunrise.
  • “In the land of the blind, the one eyed man is king.” Within a group of unremarkable people, you can stand out without being extraordinary. Becoming a big fish in a small pond is easy because the pond is tiny, with little competition, and the other fish are not so fine as you are.
  • There are fewer small ponds these days. Over our history, especially when villages and small towns predominated, we could achieve high status without difficulty. Now we must compete with people all over the globe.
  • The only thing you control is what you do, what you think. The attempt to change other adults is a fool’s errand unless they want to be altered, like an article of clothing needing to be resized. Remember the old psychotherapy joke:

Question: How many therapists does it take to change a light bulb?

Answer: One, but the light bulb must want to be changed.

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  • Most selfish people don’t experience much guilt. Those who fear their own selfishness tend to overstate the danger. Even then a self-sacrificing person must care for his own needs. Please recall the airline safety instructions:

If the oxygen mask comes down and you are traveling with someone who is dependent on you, put the mask on yourself first. (Otherwise you’d be of little help to your companion or child).

  • Many folks don’t buy into the belief their choices are as genetically determined as they are. Example:

Maybe you say, “I dress the way I do to look nice.” Well, an evolutionary scholar would tell you ancestors who made a good appearance were more likely to have their choice of healthy, faithful mates and thereby ensure they would create fit offspring. That tendency is “built-in,” so we incline toward concern about appearances well after our biological clocks stop.

  • The average 16th-century man had less information to process in his short lifetime than can be found in a single, daily edition of The New York Times. We must narrow our focus or drown in a sea of real news, fake news, and drivel. Too many of us attend to things of no lasting value.
  • Change can be unsettling. The effort to keep our world exactly as it is, however, can lead us to reduce the size of our lives, resist unfamiliar experiences, and fail to incorporate new people in our circle. Flexibility is a key to life satisfaction. Change is an opportunity to reinvent oneself.
  • Don’t expect sincere apologies any time soon. In 1942 West Coast Japanese Americans were forcibly relocated to internment camps by the federal government, which alleged potential disloyalty during the ongoing war. World War II ended in 1945. Not until 1988 did the USA formally apologize, citing the real reasons for this disgraceful act against a group which included 62% U.S. citizens:

Race prejudice, war hysteria, and the failure of political leadership.

  • Inaction, stillness, and patience are powerful tools. Passive-resistance has been a major and successful method of changing the world, one practiced by Gandhi and Martin Luther King. Here is a modest illustration of how passivity can work for you:

When my wife and I bought our current home, we dealt directly with the owner. He proposed a price. I was silent. As the seconds passed he lowered the number a few times. The man assumed my failure to respond meant he’d not reached a figure acceptable to us. The truth was, however, he went below what we were prepared to pay.

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  • If you chase people they are inclined to flee. Stop chasing and they may turn toward you or even walk in your direction. Consider this with respect to your romantic life.
  • I had the pleasure of a friendship with a Japanese businessman residing in the USA. His favorite teacher advised him to choose a career that was his second love, not the thing he loved best. Why?

If you do what you love best as your vocation you will discover it becomes a thing you must do, not an activity you choose to do. You may kill the thing you love.

  • Luck is most often defined by happy accidents and near misses: finding a dollar on the street, winning the lottery, that sort of thing. A bigger scale exists. My wife’s maternal grandmother was an indentured servant in Poland. She served on a farm before indoor plumbing was common. When using the outhouse in wintertime she jumped from one cow patty to another to keep her bare feet warm.

In my mother-in-law’s childhood, she and her young friends picked up lumps of coal that fell off passing freight trains to help heat their homes. I can remember washboards and clothes lines in my youth, a day of few washing machines and dryers. In graduate school we used mechanical calculators to compute research results until giant computers became available. The point?

Be grateful for what you have.

  • Think about random events for a moment. The most unlikely event in your life is that you exist at all. Had my grandparents not left Europe at the beginning of the 20th-century, I could have been murdered by the Nazis some time later. Moreover, for each of us to exist as the unique person we are, every ancestor had to meet and procreate with just the mate with whom they did. Had only one made a different choice or perhaps had intercourse on another day, we wouldn’t be here. Others would.
  • I worked for a quirky psychiatrist at a now defunct psychiatric institution. MJ was enormously bright and also quite full of himself. One day he asked me to sub for him at a meeting. I reported back the criticism I heard aimed at him. He was unperturbed. MJ’s only comment was, “A big tree casts a long shadow.” In other words, MJ viewed himself as a big, imposing tree and therefore believed some people were going to take shots at him, be jealous, etc. I thought to myself, “You really are full of yourself.” A second later I realized he was right:

If you are going to do anything significant in life and hold opinions not universally agreed upon, you need to let the bullets bounce off. There will be bullets.

  • In his Politics, Aristotle writes about those who “proceed on the supposition that they should either preserve or increase without limit their holdings of money. The cause of this condition is that they are serious about living, but not about living well.”
  • Aristotle was born over 2400 years ago. Lucky for us, some of the best advice has been around for a while.

The first image is called Study for Inner Improvement by Helen Almeida, dating from 1977. The next one is Even if Happiness Forgets You Occasionally, Never Forget It Completely, a year 2000 work of Hasson Massoudy, followed by an Untitled 1993 painting of Albert Oehlen. Finally comes Evening Magic created in 2000 by Eyvind Earle. All are sourced from Wikiart.org.