I graduated high school in 1970, and in my class was a fine young man whom we'll call Scott, mainly because that's his name. Scott has a PhD and is a regular contributor to Psychology Today, which is not terribly surprising as he's a LIBERAL with an executive membership card and the official thermos and lunchbox.
A good friend of mine who shall remain nameless has a FB account. Upon reading one article that Scott wrote, he pondered the significance for about ten minutes before he was distracted by a naked woman running around his front yard holding a For Rent sign.
One way or another, Scott was encouraged to write a follow-up article, and did so, which my friend also read. Instead of ignoring the entire business, he wrote a response, posted it, and a few hours later discovered that Scott had deleted his thoughtful missive and blocked him on FB. He was surprised - I wasn't.
So, for your amusement, here we go: The FaceBook Fiasco
These two articles were written by Scott G. Eberle Ph.D. (Scott Eberle on PhuckBook) and published in Psychology Today. I've read both, and neither one makes a whole lot of sense to me.
The 7 Rules of a Highly Playful Retirement Boiled Down to 1
Replacing a preoccupation with doom-for-entertainment with play.
Stay Resilient - Further Advice From the No-Geezing Zone
Play as an antidote for "geezing."
About the Author
Scott G. Eberle, Ph.D., holds a doctorate in American intellectual history, has executed scores of museum exhibits, is former editor of The Strong’s American Journal of Play and former vice president for play studies. Scott is author of Classic Toys of the National Toy Hall of Fame and co-editor of The Handbook of Study of Play. In his spare time, Scott is an avid downhill skier and biker.
Here is the response that evidently got on Scott's very last nerve:
You might have started this tirade at the beginning, and entitle the missive What Makes a Geezer? or Why Pollyanna Never Had a Bad Day.
When I was twenty-one, I worked with a woman who made Pollyanna look like a clinically depressed pessimist. Upon removing her psychedelic rose colored shades one day, she noted I was a bit depressed. I was fresh from a bitter fight with my psychotic girl-friend who was threatening suicide, my manager had just delivered a ten minute lecture to me on just why I was no good at my job (which hinged around the fact that I was straight; he and the others weren't), and my checking account had just hit a new low that was solidly into the negative numbers.
Her comment?
"Isn't life beautiful for you, Jack?"
I stalled out for a second or two while I formulated a succinct response.
"Well frankly Sharon, life's a bitch."
She went off to complain to the boss about my attitude. I wanted a drink, but being badly bent, there was none to be had.
Ever have a bad day? Every little thing goes wrong, starting with the toilet showing unmistakable signs of being plugged up, to the engine in the car making a funny noise that sounds like it might be a main bearing headed south, and then having to wade through a dozen or so people at work, none of whom you'd ever go out drinking with even if they were buying and you were as dry as the Sahara, and all of these people sharing one outstanding trait: incompetence. They fuck it up; you have to fix it.
Then you have to miss lunch because your boss (may he catch the clap from his wife, and may she blame it on him, and may he believe her), your boss has scheduled you for a business meeting that surprises everyone with brand new and impossible to meet sales goals and budget constraints - which translates into no raise this year, and the Christmas bonus is going to be a turkey or a ham, your choice.
When you finally get home, and discover that the old ball and chain is over visiting her man hating, crazy as a sack of rabid porcupines, sister and has taken the dog - YOUR DOG! - with her, because Charlie likes to play with her kids.
So the only really, truly sincere glad to see you is gone.
And you're all out of gin.
And... you, Scott Eberle (and your friends and associates), can pour two fingers of top shelf whiskey into a glass, order a pizza with double cheese and pepperoni, and tell yourself that today was one real bitch of a day, but tomorrow will be better. Then you have a drink, and maybe a beer with the pizza when it finally arrives, and that's that. You're convinced that tomorrow will be better, if only marginally better. But better. See?
A geezer doesn't have that last part. The true geezer knows that tomorrow won't be any better; it's very likely to be worse. The light at the end of the tunnel isn't some fantastic Xanaduvian paradise; it's a train. If the geezer is lucky, if the Lord takes pity on him and sends in some Divine intervention, tomorrow will only be as bad as today. Not worse, just no better.
That's what makes a geezer. That's why play doesn't work.
See?
5 comments:
My instincts tell me that it might have been microscopically slightly over the top... But it's hard to say because I abandoned the first article about halfway through do to not knowing what he was talking about and what his imaginary 7 points boiled down to one were, and the article headings didn't seem to promise relief. The second article I read fully, and came to the conclusion that for him, 'geezer' is one of those abstract concepts that only make sense in papers that have confused you well before you get to it. I bet he stopped reading the response at the word, 'pollyanna', because Ivory tower types really hate it when someone points out they have no clothes.
If you make an assumption that you can call the PHd an academic, than you think he would take the time to answer a challenge to his hypothesis, not slam the door on it.
As a geezer, we were taught in research that if you had a hypothesis, it was up to you to generate the data to defend it against all comers. That seems to have fallen by the wayside these days, especially in a university setting.
You warned me it would be unintelligible to clear thinking individual. Or a drunk.
I'm a busy guy. I will read you, not him. You made sense.
You are not understanding what this guy is or what he's doing. Sounds to me like he's trying to rip off Jordan Petersen who has written books on how people can (pardon my fwench) - 'unfuck themselves'. Most of us have no need of a book like that because its mostly common sense and you can talk in generalities. This guy is probably not thinking at all about folks like your friend.
In practice, a clinical psychologist goes into every case differently. He has to; people are different, with different strengths, weaknesses and illnesses. The psychologist needs to understand the person and his circumstances before he goes to work.
People in dire straights often find themselves with tunnel vision. All they can do or see is making this day and going on to the next and nothing else. Those people need to unfuck themselves and often it comes at enormous personal cost, and sometimes at prohibitive cost.
Sounds to me like your guy needs to drop out of the rat race, sell everything and maybe live in a van and do some travelling while he puts his head back together. Or maybe something similar. He needs to blow some dust out of his brain box because he is going nowhere good.
How about you, Jack? Gawd, you're too quiet these days. You need to write more. ;)
CWMartin: Seeing it written and published, it may have been a bit harsh for the thin skin of a Liberal SJW in disguise, which is what the author amounts to. Add to that I couldn't understand either article, and I'm glad I'm not alone.
Gerry: Nice point - thanks! You're quite right in your comments about defense not existing anymore. In this case, he refuses to consider anything he doesn't agree with. Not the trait of any erudite intellectual.
Ed: Thank you for your support and kind words.
Glen: Thanks for stopping by, and for your insightful comments. I especially enjoyed your commentary about dire straights and the outlook.
I asked OldNFO about the articles, and he described them as word salad, which contained a warning not to watch Fox News. I agree with him.
As for me, I'm feeling a bit overwhelmed at the state of the U.S. The Left and Right want to meet for a rumble to decide territory, freedom, and rulership. But the Left will only show up if they are certain of victory, and the Right is will to go all in no matter what.
The economy is killing me. $63.92 to fill my tank, which holds 18 gallons; I put in 17. The price of food is climbing. Hell, the cost of everything that gets shipped or involves fuel in any way is in orbit, which is driving prices even higher.
I think I need something, and it isn't gin for breakfast.
Post a Comment