home

The Friday Funnies

The Dangers of Thinking (appropriate for those who have been spinning their wheels all week trying to figure out the Rove-Plame Leak Scandal)

It started out innocently enough. I began to think at parties now and then--to loosen up. Inevitably, though, one thought led to another, and soon I was more than just a
social thinker.

I began to think alone, "to relax," I told myself, but I knew it wasn't true. Thinking became more and more important to me, and finally I was thinking all the time. That was when things began to sour at home. One evening I had turned off the TV and asked my wife about the meaning of life. She spent that night at her mother's.

I began to think on the job. I knew that thinking and employment don't mix, but I couldn't stop myself. I began to avoid friends at lunchtime so I could read Thoreau and Kafka. I would return to the office dizzied and confused, asking, "What is it exactly we are doing here?" One day the boss called me in. He said, "Listen, I like you, and it hurts me to say this, but your thinking hasbecome a real problem. If you don't stop thinking on the job, you'll have to find another job." This gave me a lot to think about.

I came home early after my conversation with the boss. "Honey," I confessed, "I've been thinking." "I know you've been thinking," she said, "and I want a divorce!" "But Honey, surely it's not that serious." "It is serious," she said, lower lip aquiver. "You think as much as college professors, and college professors don't make any money, so if you keep on thinking, we won't have any money!" "That's a faulty syllogism," I said, impatiently.

She exploded in tears of rage and frustration, but I was in no mood to deal with the emotional drama. "I'm going to the library," I snarled as I stomped out the door. I headed for the library, in the mood for some Nietzsche. I roared into the parking lot with NPR on the radio and ran up to the big glass doors. They didn't open. The library was closed.

To this day, I believe that a Higher Power was looking out for me that night. Leaning on the unfeeling glass, whimpering for Zarathustra, a poster caught my eye. "Friend, is heavy thinking ruining your life?" it asked. You probably recognize that line. It comes from the standard Thinker's Anonymous poster.

Which is why I am what I am today: a recovering thinker. I never miss a TA meeting. At each meeting we watch a non-educational video; last week It was "Porky's." Then we share experiences about how we avoided thinking since the last meeting.

I still have my job, and things are a lot better at home. Life just seemed...easier, somehow, as soon as I stopped thinking. I think the road to recovery is nearly complete for me. Today, I registered to vote as a Republican.

< CJ Rehnquist Will Not Resign | Another One Bites the Dust >
  • The Online Magazine with Liberal coverage of crime-related political and injustice news

  • Contribute To TalkLeft


  • Display: Sort:
    Re: The Friday Funnies (none / 0) (#1)
    by bad Jim on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:14 PM EST
    A Kafka jones is already a bad sign. The humor is so dark that it hardly registers as such. Nietzsche, though ... is a little bit more like champagne. Efferverscent, inducing giddiness, harmless at first, but may eventually give way to freethinking. Eventually you wind up hugging horses. I still don't understand what's wrong with that.

    Re: The Friday Funnies (none / 0) (#2)
    by Ernesto Del Mundo on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:14 PM EST
    Thinking is a scourge that such entities as People Magazine, television, and the Republican Party have made great strides in eliminating. And you can rest assured that they will continue working feverishly to stamp it out completely.

    Re: The Friday Funnies (none / 0) (#3)
    by john horse on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:14 PM EST
    Reminds me of a story my mother once told me. She was visiting a neighbor who was ill. This neighbor was a member of a religious group, that some would label a cult. Well, the neighbor was feeling fine but unfortunately for my mother when she got there she soon found herself surrounded by her neighbor's religous friends. As part of their efforts to proselytize her, they tried to tie their religion with the great philosophers of the past. "But you know" she said "because I went to college and actually read the philosophers they were mentioning I knew that they were full of BS." The lesson for me was that knowledge doesn't necessarily impart the truth but it helps weed out that which is not true.

    Re: The Friday Funnies (none / 0) (#4)
    by ppjakajim on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:15 PM EST
    Perhaps after a while the person will become truly smart, become a social liberal and reguster as an Independent. ;-)

    Re: The Friday Funnies (none / 0) (#6)
    by ppjakajim on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:17 PM EST
    DA - Evidently you know more about vulture's eating habits than the rest of us.