Not long ago, I wrote a post entitled “Bubble Boy”
(5/21) (I know I’m supposed to do
something so you can click on the title and go to it, but I’m just grateful I
can do this.)
In “Bubble Boy”, I reported how, during a recent visit to
Canada, I became acutely aware that I had become more Americanized than I had imagined,
championing, as I did, the American totem of individualism over the more
communitarian proclivities of my home and native land. It appears that, unbeknownst to yours truly,
I had surreptitiously relocated to the “American Bubble.”
(Not that there isn’t also a “Canadian Bubble” – perhaps, in
part, involving the dis-encouragement of individualism, which may help to explain
the substantial number of necessary defections to the United States. Reconsidering, my experience awakened me to
the fact that I had imperceptibly transferred my allegiances from one bubble to
another.)
My Canadian eye-opener led me to wonder about “bubbles” in
general, pondering the ubiquitousness of the bubbular experience. In that context I came up with one of my
favorite lines of recent writing. (He
said, patting himself on the back in a more American than Canadian fashion,
wrenching his shoulder blade agonizingly in the process.)
I was talking about rich people’s offspring, reflecting their bubbular situation with an
exemplifying quote, that went,
RICH PERSON’S
OFFSPRING: “You mean poor
children don’t have everything?”
It’s good, isn’t it?
(Ow! My shoulder blade!)
Feeling immediately guilty and ashamed, I started to think
about whether such erroneous perceptions were really the rich’s offsprings’ –
or their parents’ – fault. Or,
realistically, “That is simply the way it is.”
Perhaps cultural – or subcultural – insularity is inevitable. Although, as I was recently reminded, social
media is fundamentally changing all of that.
Once seriously deprived people could say, “Everyone we knew was in the
same predicament, so we had no idea we were how badly off we really were.”
With internet interconnectivity, deprived people now know exactly what
they’re missing. And they are beginning
to do something about it.
“They have
freedom? We want freedom too!”
Repercussions to follow.
You can decide whether things are better or worse because of
that, though it doesn’t matter, because it’s unstoppable.
(NOTE: I was
about to include a section concerning super-rich families traveling to desperately
poor countries, to show their children how horrible things can be, so they’ll
stop asking for stuff. (Although the families travel there First
Class, stopping at the Desperately Poor
Country Four Seasons. Super-rich
Visitor: “Did you expect us to stay
in the hut?” But then I remembered a story closer to home,
where I can make a similar point without being a jerk about it. Although I admit to “Partial Jerkiness” by
sneaking a little of it in.)
This recollection concerns my wonderful stepdaughter Rachel,
on her way to her first year of college at Skidmore,
which is in upstate New York. For those
who don’t know her, Rachel is the most sensible, down-to-earth, caring and
compassionate person in our family – wait; that
may be too low a bar –… you could ever run into. Yeah, that’s raising it where it
belongs. (Credit here must fairly be
accorded to Rachel’s Dad, whose, perhaps, hippie-derived values have helped
inspire Rachel’s generosity and kindness.)
And yet…
Okay, so the entire family has decamped to deliver Rachel to
college, and in transit, before trekking to up Saratoga Springs where Skidmore is located, we spend a few days
in New York, bivouacking at the Plaza
Hotel.
The hotel management, inexplicably mistaking us for people
who matter, had upgraded us to an enormous suite, with a magnificent
perspective of Central Park. We never
found out why they had done that, partly, probably, because we had neglected to
ask.
Anyway, we are this room that could house a small regiment,
and Rachel calls her assigned college roommate, a fellow freshman named Salima
who lives in Brooklyn, inviting her over, so they can begin to get
acquainted. Rachel informs Salima that
we are staying at the Plaza Hotel, asking
her, “Do you know where that is?”
Salima assures Rachel that she does. But she, very likely, files that question
away.
When Salima arrives, she is greeted at our Versailles-like
lodgings by Rachel and her nine year-old half-sister Anna, their parents having
temporarily departed, for reasons no longer remembered. (We like New York. You can walk there without being threatened
by skateboarders.)
In the meantime, Salima is meeting Rachel for the first time
– a teenaged freshman, ensconced in palatial surroundings, no supervising
parents, and, I’m sure, knowing her fashion demands, an impeccably outfitted
little girl, Salima almost certainly wondering,
“Who are these people!”
After chatting for a while, Rachel proposes that they go
down to Greenwich Village, to meet one of Rachel’s childhood buddies who is
about to begin college at NYU, for lunch.
Salima immediately agrees to the plan, explaining that there
will be no problem getting there. She
then rattles off a number of alphabetically-labeled subway lines they would
ride, along with transfers they would need to make, to arrive at their downtown
destination. After which Rachel
innocently inquires,
“Can’t we just take a taxi?”
SALIMA: (RE: RACHEL)
“This is going to be quite a trip.”
It’s “The Bubble.”
And it happens to the best of us.
And there is no need to go far afield for examples, sitting
in gargantuan accommodations at the Plaza
Hotel.
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America won its independence on the battlefield. Canada won its independence via the British North America Act. I honor American independence by remembering the Fourth of July. I honor Canadain independence by remember the First of July...three days after it happened.
Happy 'Fourth." And, retroactively, a happy "First."
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America won its independence on the battlefield. Canada won its independence via the British North America Act. I honor American independence by remembering the Fourth of July. I honor Canadain independence by remember the First of July...three days after it happened.
Happy 'Fourth." And, retroactively, a happy "First."
1 comment:
I hope Rachael was allowed to go out in the world on her own, and learn that without money (hoping her parents didn't indulge her), she had to figure out the subway system, and where the free concerts were in NYC, or wherever she began her work life.
Salima, I assume, after college probably took some taxis to where she was going.
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