“It was the best of times; it was the worst of times; but it
was proportionally more the worst of times.”
Leslie Dickens, Charles’s
less sensational though more journalistically accurate writer-brother. (I almost wrote “younger brother”, thereby
unconsciously giving away the store.)
Note: This
post is not about baseball. Explanation: To Come.
But first – the part about baseball.
At one point in this season, the Los Angeles Dodgers’ won-loss record was 91-36, meaning they had won
91 games and lost 36.
That is a really,
really good record. The Dodgers held a twenty-game lead in their
division, they had won fifteen more games than anyone else in baseball, they
were projected to at least have a chance
at winning more games in one season than any team in the history of the game, Sports Illustrated did a cover story on
them, entitled, “Best Team Ever?”
Then, beginning in late August, the arguable “Best Team
Ever” proceeded to lose 16 out of their next 17 games. (They almost lost again last night (Note: This was written yesterday.) which would
have made them 1-17, struggling to the “Finish Line” against a terrible Giants team who are 37 games behind them
in the National League West
standings.
Hence, “It was the best of times; it was the worst of times.”
The difference is that in Dickens’s Tale of Two Cities, it was both
of them at the same time. (Although
agreeing with brother Leslie, I reject the false equivalency – one guy’s “It
is a far, far better thing I do, than I have ever done” versus the French
Revolution, where heads were rolling all over the place. I mean, talk about chutzpah!) (Insolent
self-centeredness)
In one season, consecutively,
rather than in the “See: Above” example, the Dodgers were the best team in baseball and also the worst team in baseball. That has never happened before. If the Dodgers
were looking for a record, they set
one. “Best record for four months worst record
for two-and-a-half weeks in the same season” an achievement likely to stand the statistical test of
time.
Inevitably, baseball experts – as well as interested
observers – pored over the ashes of this debacle, looking for reasons for this
torturous tailspin.
“The Dodgers keep shuffling their line-up.”
“The recently procured players have upset the team’s
delicate chemistry.”
“The opposition has discovered the Dodgers preferred, previously successful, batting approach and are ordering
pitches higher in the strike zone to defuse it.
(Like a startling number of others before them) “The Dodgers have succumbed to the Sports Illustrated cover jinx.”
Okay, that’s it for baseball. Which I used as an example for the following:
Like the mystified baseball pundits, searching for an answer
– “we”, meaning the human species – are generically incapable of having things
happen without definitively determining the reason they did. An experience takes
place, and we get right down to business, searching for an acceptable explanation,
refusing to quit until the troubling phenomenon is adequately explained – “Magic”,
“Science”, “God’s mysterious ways” – something
– putting the vexing confusion satisfyingly to rest. Or else, we can’t. Rest, that is.
“How do you handle that with your patients?” I asked a
psychologist who happens to live in the house.
“Aren’t therapy patients always flailing to find reasons and explanations
for their condition?”
It was related to me – by someone related to me – that
sometimes patients are required to come to terms with the fact that some terrible
occurrences “just happen. “Emotionally
distant parents”? Luck of the draw. To be accepted, and successfully lived with
as best as you can.
An appended tidbit suggested the patient, at some point,
might spark to the realization that they
are perpetuating the same behavior, discovering that, like their parents, they too behave emotionally distant.
An hour or so later, it occurred to me that what began an as
“acceptance” story had evolved into a “discovering the answer” story. Meaning, as I originally believed,
It is always about the answers.
(In fact, should the effort be made, the answer for the hypothetical
patient’s parents’ emotionally distance could also be discovered. And so
on, back through family history.)
It was later confirmed to me that, when it comes to
searching for answers, the brain is a natural “Sorting Machine”, constantly testing
out reasonable connections, never stopping till “That’s it!” Which I immediately
interpreted as an essential “Survival Mechanism.” (My
answer to why the brain does that. And possibly Darwin’s, as well.)
“Thog ate the
mushroom and he died. The question is,
did he die from eating the mushroom? Or
was he simply eating a mushroom when he died?”
“You know who that makes no difference to whatsoever?”
“Who?”
“Thog.”
“Yes, but we need to find out which it was. Was it a poison mushroom, or wasn’t it?”
“I steer clear of all
mushrooms, for specifically that reason.”
“But then you miss out on wonderful mushrooms, including the
delicate and delicious enoki. Besides, do you not have an insatiable urge
to find out what happened?”
“I do sense an
unquieting curiosity. What do we have to
do?”
“We have to eat the mushroom that Thog was eating when he died.”
“I see. And by “we”,
do you happen to mean you?”
“I was thinking about you.”
“Why?”
“Because you’re not as curious as I am. I eat the mushroom and die, there goes our people’s
best chance at 'The Relentless Pursuit of the Answer.' I must live, so that countless others won’t die."
“First of all, bullpoop.
Second of all, what’s wrong with, ‘We are just never going to know’?”
“We have to
know. For our basic survival, we must
always struggle to understand.”
“Well then understand this. I am not eating the mushroom. Wow, you’re right. I feel a lot better clearing that up.
Plus, I may live longer than today.”
Let’s leave it at that.
Historically, sooner or later, somebody, accidentally, eats the mushroom
and somebody standing beside him says, “He seemed healthy before he ate it and
was stone cold dead after the fact. I
think we have our explanation.”
Though “having the answer” is not everything – the troubling consequences do not miraculously
disappear – the difficult burden is helpfully lightened by “a mystery resolved.”
As for the Dodgers?
I see their stunned faces in the dugout,
And know they still haven’t got a clue.
The Dodgers are in post-season form.
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