There are two kinds of
people. (Reminding me of my cousin
Herschel’s, “There are two kinds of bald people – those with hair and those
without.”)
In this case, the “two
kinds of people” are those who prefer flying the plane themselves, and those
who willingly cede the piloting duties to others. Hopefully, professional others.
“I’m actually in
‘Maintenance’ but there was nobody in the cockpit so I thought I’d give it a
shot.”
Nobody wants them.
But I do want the
experienced and competent “Them.” To pilot
the airline, and, in the context of the tale I began yesterday, to “navigate”
my car to unknown destinations.
I thoroughly trust
those electronic (?) services. If my
car’s “GPS System” said,
“Turn right and
proceed into the river.”
I would perhaps
hesitate, I would definitely roll up the windows, but lacking other viable
alternatives… who knows?
Maybe not.
But if I eschewed the
“Route Guidance” system, it’s, like,
“What now?”
My available options
being “the river”, and “lost.”
On the other hand, some
people, are unable under uncomfortable under any circumstance meekly
handing over the reins. Serious
operations? It’s like,
“Could you anesthetize
me except for one eye?”
Or something.
Despite their demonstrable
limitations in said arena, they adamantly refuse to surrender control.
These are the people
who, despite “Route Guidance System” direction, regularly dismiss its
accumulated advice. Because they believe
that – or actually do – know
better. And they’ll be damned if they’ll
blindly follow a geo-locational machine.
(An engineer in the family taught me “geo-locational.”)
The question is – at
least the one that occurred to me to pursue – is how the “Route Guidance
System” representative feels about this insulting predicament? And with that, we
FADE IN:
INT. PSYCHOTHERAPIST’S OFFICE – DAY
A “STANDARD ISSUE” PSYCHOTHERAPIST
– this is not about them – USHERS IN A FEMALE PATIENT INTO THE ROOM.
THERAPIST: “Come on in.”
THE VISIBLY TIGHTLY WOUND PATIENT ENTERS, HEADING TOWARDS
THE OFFERED, DESIGNATED SEAT.
ROUTE GUIDANCE
REPRESENTATIVE: “MUMBLING TO
HERSELF) “In ten steps, turn right. (AFTER PROCEEDING NINE STEPS) ‘Turn
right. Boop-Boop.” (SHE JUDICIOUSLY TURNS RIGHT) You have now arrived at your destination.”
THE PATIENT THEN SITS, FOLLOWED POLITELY BY THE THERAPIST.
ROUTE GUIDANCE
REPRESENTATIVE: “Sorry,
‘Occupational Hazard.’ I can’t seem to
turn it off. Scared off a lot of first
dates. But that’s not why I’m here.”
“What is?”
“Well… (TAKING A DEEP, DELAYING BREATH)…”
“It’s okay. You’re
amongst friends.”
SHE SWALLOWS HARD, CLEARING THE DECKS FOR A PERSONAL
CONFESSION.
“They won’t listen!”
“Who won’t
listen?”
“The people who use ‘Route Guidance.’ I give them specific directions, and they insist
on going their own way!”
“All of them?”
“No. A lot of them go
where I tell them, arriving comfortably at their destinations. It’s those others – those insolent ‘Know-it-alls!”
“Who don’t arrive
comfortably at their destinations?”
(INDIGNANTLY) “I hope not! (THEN, REALIZING) What a terrible thing to say! Which would probably have taken months or
even years to openly acknowledge.
Unfortunately, our Mr. Pomerantz has limited time and we have to hurry
things along.”
“When the people ignore your directions…”
“… My assiduously compiled
directions…”
“… your assiduously compiled
directions… how does that make you feel?”
“I already answered
that, didn’t I?”
“Yes, but as a stereotypical psychologist, I am required to
include that question.”
“Well, then as a stereotypical patient, I shall dutifully
respond.
“They turn me on – they miss the first direction. Fine.
I get them back on track with three consecutive ‘Rights’ – they ignore
the three consecutive ‘Rights.’ I
adjust, ‘recalculating’ an alternate route
– they disregard that alternate route. It’s
like ‘What, am I talking to myself?’ I mean, how would you feel, providing helpful advice and they completely reject it?”
“That is pretty much the definition of my job.”
“Don’t you hate it?”
“In our business, it’s a process. Hopefully, in time, they will eventually relax
and consider my suggestions.”
“And what if they don’t?”
“Then they wasted their time in therapy.”
“Exactly! You don’t want therapy – don’t come to
therapy. You don’t want ‘Route Guidance’
– listen to the radio. There are those wonderful
‘Ted’ Talks.’ Maybe there’ll be one on their
inability to take advice.”
“‘People who won’t listen to you.’ Does that remind you of anyone, past or
present?”
‘Another stereotypical question?”
“Sometimes they work.”
“The answer is ‘No.’
I am, by nature, an authoritative personality. That’s how I got this job in the first
place. I scored in the 93rd
percentile on ‘Trustworthy Voice Transmission.’
You know, they assign us
‘Success Ratings’. Like Uber.
When they determined that I was, perhaps, too authoritative – I tested ‘Borderline Teutonic’ – I was required
to visit a Voice Coach, where I learned an upscale English accent, tempering ‘Authoritative’
with ‘Elegant Refinement.’ And you know
what? Those idiots still wouldn’t listen!”
“Did you ever think, ‘Maybe it’s not me, it’s them.”
“The ‘Reverse Costanza’ approach? Of course,
it’s them! And it utterly infuriates
me! No respect! No surrendering to authority! No acknowledging that they don’t know
everything and that there is no shame in soliciting advice!”
“Care for a suggestion?”
“If it’s a good one.
Otherwise, forget it. I will
figure this out for myself.”
“Well. That sounds familiar.”
“What do you mean?’
“It sounds to me like
you’re ‘Them.’”
A LADEN “MOMENT OF INSIGHT”, FOLLOWED BY YEARS OF FURTHER
TREATMENT, AND AN ENORMOUS BILL.
FADE OUT.
I enjoyed this. With a voice coming out of the route planning device, it does seem like it has some kind of personality and could possibly have its feelings hurt if you didn't take its advice. One of my earliest memories as a child is that I made sure to play with all of my toys an equal amount of time so their feelings wouldn't be hurt.
ReplyDeleteI was wondering about the route planning device that used Mr. T's voice to tell you where to turn and insulted you if you missed a turn. I'll bet that device was never ignored.