THE BELL CURVE -- joseph n. bell
People who make their living as professional writers -- as I’ve
done for almost 50 years -- seldom show their work to anyone prior to
submitting it for publication. Unless there is a deliberate
collaboration, teamwork is anathema to a writer. The buck begins and
stops here.
But I have a curious writing relationship with my wife, who is a fine and
highly skilled writer and editor. I only show her work in progress if I’m
dubious about it. That’s why the column you’re reading now is not the
column I originally wrote for this space. I knew that one didn’t work,
but it was finished, and I could go on to other things. So I made her
tell me to kill it.
She did -- although this was a cowardly act on my part that I will
probably repeat when and if similar circumstances arise. There is a
period of irritation after this happens that I can direct at her rather
than my work before I acknowledge that she’s right and get on with a new
approach.
The column that died aborning grew out of a phone call we received from
my stepson, Erik, who had just returned to college after spending a
weekend at home. He called to tell us that we were not acting responsibly
by failing to prepare for some sort of Armageddon that will take place
when our technology collapses at the turn of the millennium.
Specifically, he urged us to set aside a supply of fresh water, keep an
adequate supply of cash on hand and stay off the streets at midnight.
He was only half joking, and it struck me how otherwise rational people
are running scared of this witching hour, preparing for unknown
disasters, most of which are both out of their control and extremely
unlikely to happen. So the column I killed took off from this point to
offer a list of things we should really worry about in the millennium
year. And that turned out to be a mean-spirited laundry list of people
and activities I don’t like. Cheap shots, if you will.
So I’ll spread them out over the year, but the millennium paranoia still
fascinates me. The disaster syndrome. We have in our garage an earthquake
box. It has been there for 10 years, and I have no idea what is in it. It
is there because my wife insisted on assembling and storing it. She
considers this common sense. I consider it an unnecessary waste of space
and energy because I tend to play the odds -- and the odds that an
earthquake will destroy our home are long enough for me to lay off the
earthquake box, a view she shares about the millennium.
Still the general uneasiness persists and continues to grow as we
approach the end of the year. Why? Some theories occur to me that may be
studied posthumously if Armageddon does, indeed, take place Jan. 1.
The millennium paranoia is rooted in two kinds of soil especially fertile
for our neuroses: technology and the unknown. Earthquakes and other
natural phenomena are tangible. We can see, feel and touch them. They
have a history, and we have either experienced or read about them. They
may be fearsome, but they are familiar. That’s why people rebuild
shattered homes.
But the evil force threatening to run out of control at the turn of the
century is technology, which man created and now can’t control. Because a
lot of technical geniuses having a field day a few decades ago didn’t see
and program for the crisis of a new century, our machines -- we are told
-- are going to turn on us and God knows what havoc they might wreak.
Maybe living through the Great Depression has inured me against worrying
about such matters. Franklin Roosevelt told us then that “the only thing
we have to fear is fear itself.” This may not strike the most profound
philosophical note of the century, but it resonated deeply in a country
where millions of people faced the possibility of not eating. And it
seems just as applicable to the millennium fears. What might happen isn’t
nearly as dangerous and upsetting as our fear of what might happen.
And so you get Psychology 101 here today instead of cheap shots. If you
aren’t convinced, go stock up on bottled water and tell us to buzz off if
we come around asking for a drink a few days into the new millennium.
Meanwhile, we plan to go to a party on New Year’s Eve, and my stepson has
announced that he will be staying home, sipping his bottled water,
counting his cash and watching the carnage on TV as the country’s
computers implode and our economy collapses.
Because I believe in hedging my bets whenever possible, I still plan to
bury a small box in our backyard of especially treasured possessions just
in case the pillage and burning get into this neighborhood. The only foul
ball I ever got in 50 years of watching major league baseball, my flight
log books, my Anaheim Stadium “Brick Donor” certificate. Things like
that.
Meanwhile, I won’t be showing my wife any advance copy for quite awhile.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a Santa Ana Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
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