Thursday, May 9, 2013

The case for mortality

Marvin Minsky's Society of Mind was my first exposure to the notion that our early concepts -- those things we learned to believe first -- are the hardest to change. The reason is that so much else depends on them. They are like our mental alphabet, and modifications risk collapsing the structure of our thoughts and beliefs. (John Holland and others showed similar results for genes, but that's a story for a different day.) The more complex and experienced our minds become, the more inflexible. It's not biology so much as it is math. So we are born with an expiration date. As long as the world changes around us, we will continue to be left behind. Whether this is by accident or design, we are unlikely to alter it.

My grandfather was born to a world without cars, radio, or electricity.* He didn't get running water inside the house until he was in his sixties, and still preferred the walk to the outhouse when weather permitted. I suppose pooping in the house is a concept that takes some getting used to, if you didn't grow up with it. I don't think he ever had a telephone, and he managed to live eighty-four years without ever stepping on an airplane.

My grandfather and me in the "initial food prep" area of his farm. The smokehouse is in the background, with his impressive collection of walking sticks. Just out of the frame to the right is a spigot that delivered the only running water on the farm.

My parents' generation was forged in a global depression sandwiched between the two most destructive wars our civilization has ever experienced, harbingers of the promise and potential horror of globalization and technology. Fortitude, stability, and duty were their watchwords. Their world was a hard and dangerous place. The wise were prepared for anything. They believed in citizenship and strong social institutions. If they were the greatest generation, it is likely because they lived the greatest challenges.

My lot grew up in the Cold War. Whether we were playing cops and robbers, cowboys and Indians, Allies and Nazis, or something else, there were good guys and bad guys, and no question of which was which. Science and technology had started and ended WWII, cured polio and smallpox, and were helping us beat the dirty Russkies to the moon. Most families had one car and one working parent. Cokes were a dime and comic books were 12¢. The '¢' symbol was common. We roamed pretty much wherever we wished as kids, with the only restrictions that we look both ways before crossing the street, try not to put anyone's eye out, and be home for dinner.

I notice two phenomena as I age. The world moves away from us, in my case with globalization, new technology, complicated politics and 24 hour cable news (rapidly being replaced by Internet channels of all kinds). And we become less interested in keeping up with progress, or maybe it's that progress seems like more of an illusion. I learned enough model numbers as a kid trying to prove I knew stereo equipment. I have very little interest in keeping up with the newest smartphone features. A dear friend's father retired from architecture a few years early when his firm computerized, choosing not to bother learning a new way to do a job he had done all his life, and had done better than almost anyone. Like most his age, he eventually learned to e-mail and surf the Internet, but computer technology is neither his friend nor his constant companion.

While many of us never lose our fear of death, we begin to lose our place in life. The present becomes at once lonelier, more confusing, and more mundane. We fill the void by investing heavily in memories of the past and hopes for the future.**

On the other hand, no one appreciates a day like a person who doesn't know how many more they will see. The countability of our moments gives them meaning. I think it's impossible for the young to fully appreciate this, but it is no problem for someone who attends funerals as regularly as the rest of us go out to dinner. Every time I think of how I miss my father, I am reminded.

The result (and possibly the cause) of all this is that the little things -- family, friends, the sun in your face on a perfect day -- become the big things in life. The title on a business card, or the number of Twitter followers and Facebook friends fade in comparison. At least that's how it seems to be working for me.

I've always believed that we should enjoy our days, because the clock is ticking. It's only been in recent years that I have decided I'm okay with that.


* Technically, all of these things existed when my grandfather was born. They just weren't at all common. Sort of like Segways.

** One word: grandchildren.

7 comments:

  1. Right there with you, fella... We have a finite, and unknown, number of heartbeats left. i prefer not to squander them.

    So here's a question - why didn't we realize this sooner? Do we need to bury friends? Watch younger friends die? Lose our elders? i might have made some substantially different decisions in my life at 30 if my ability to appreciate moments had been established back then...

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    1. That's a different chapter of Minsky's book. Pondering mortality isn't really efficient use of our brain cells. It's like riding an escalator -- you only have to pay attention when it's time to get on or off. It seems endless until friends and family members begin to fall off, and then the end seems all to reachable.

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  2. i love this....heart-felt and true . Daisyfae is apparently a very physically healthy person who has had healthy friends. PS: I want a Segway...think I could balance!!

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    1. You are an exception, fortunately for most of the rest of us. We have a student at school who rides a segway. He seems to do pretty well. In your case though, I don't know that balance is the problem.

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  3. You are an excellent writer. I generally take a different view of life than you but you described much of mine so well it reminded me, in a purely platonic way, of part of the lyric of Roberta Flack's song, Killing Me Softly..."strumming my pain with his fingers, singing my life with his words"

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    1. Thanks, David. And thanks for dropping in. Killing Me Softly is one of those songs I hated as a kid, but seems to get better with age.

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    2. Yeah it does. When I came back to your site and re-read what I had written, I wondered at first why I had said it that way. Then it occurred to me. After I began pecking around on my piano again, it was one of the songs stored in the piano bench. No idea how it got there, I didn't buy it. Anyway I've had that lyric popping in and out of my consciousness for awhile now and I think it's like the old saying - "to a carpenter, everything looks like a nail."

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