essaysbysean.blogspot.com
This week’s poem is a lengthy fun piece. It makes sense to pair it with a short sober piece on our Puritan heritage. I like Puritans—you know, like the smiling man on the package of Quaker Oats. In fact, during my precious two-week holiday in London I invested time in attending a Quaker meeting—and I wish I’d paid a second visit.
I must admit that
our Puritan heritage is a mixed blessing: We can use it either way. For
instance, for the sexual revolution of my childhood, we could be anti-Puritan, repudiating
that side of our culture, and getting our menfolk out of those hideous long
plain bathing trunks. For the counter revolution, we could invoke being pro-Puritan again to justify getting men and boys out of striped jockey style bathing suits
and back to the old style, a style made new again by adding some color and a
new youthful label: surf-board shorts. How the wheel of time turns. Revolves.
Like a revolution.
Incidentally, today
you can still wear nice comfy jockey style—provided you’re willing to wear
speedos. The other brands are lost in time.
The only puritan
thing I want to address today is the guilt thing. I don’t mean modesty-guilt,
but task-guilt. In colonial times Benjamin Franklin said, “Be always ashamed to
catch thyself idle.” We have, I think, some shame if we are idle with a
long-term project still not done… Well of course it’s not done—It’s long term!
I can’t remember
the name of the professor or the title of his book—the cover was green—called
something or other. Time management? Anyways, he studied graduate students. As
you know, grad school is for folks who already have a degree, but they want
more education. They have to do a thesis, one that gets bound into a nice fine permanent
volume placed in the University archives, there to gather nice fine dust. Many
students, Puritan-style, would feel wrong having fun if their work wasn’t done.
The prof learned he could divide the students into two groups: Those who felt
guilty, and those who didn’t. But a thesis takes years.
The guilty ones finished
no sooner than the others, and, in fact, I think they finished later. In their
case, guilt was truly a waste of time.
The trick to
success, according to the prof, was “an unschedule.” Besides scheduling your
time everyday, as would a sensible Puritan, also take care, everyday, to “unschedule”
something fun to do. As a Scottish clown once sang, to get us to indulge in
fast food, “You deserve a break today…”
I used to do the
prof’s trick. Then, as with all tricks of wisdom... I forgot to keep doing it.
Or, then again, maybe I came to unschedule unconsciously. Yes, maybe so—that’s
a happier thought.
Here’s this week’s
unenlightening, un-self improving poem—A poem that years ago I unscheduled time
to memorize.
The Pobble Who has No Toes
by Edward Lear
The Pobble who has
no toes
Had once as many as we;
When they said, “Some
day you may lose them all;”
He replied, “Fish fiddle-dee-dee!”
And his Aunt
Jobiska made him drink
Lavender water
tinged with pink,
For she said, “The
World in general knows
There’s nothing so
good for a Pobble’s toes!”
The Pobble who has
no toes
Swam across the Bristol Channel;
But before he set
out he wrapped his nose
In a piece of scarlet flannel.
For his Aunt
Jabiska said, “No harm
Can come to his
toes if his nose is warm;
And it’s perfectly
known that a Pobble’s toes
Are safe, —
provided he minds his nose.”
The Pobble swam
fast and well,
And when boats or ships came near
him,
He
tinkledy-binkledy-winkled a bell,
So that all the world could hear
him.
And all the
Sailors and Admirals cried,
When they saw him
nearing the further side, —
“He has gone to
fish, for his Aunt Jobiska’s
Runcible Cat with
crimson whiskers!”
But before he
touched the shore, —
The shore of the Bristol Channel’ —
A sea-green
Porpoise carried away
His wrapper of scarlet flannel.
And when he came to
observe his feet,
Formely garnished
with toes so neat,
His face at once
became forlorn
On perceiving that
all his toes were gone!
And nobody ever
knew,
From that dark day to the present,
Whoso had taken
the Pobble’s toes,
In a manner so far from pleasant.
Whether the
shrimps or crawfish gray,
Or crafty Mermaids
stole them away —
Nobody knew; and
nobody knows
How the Pobble was
robbed of his twice five toes!
The Pobble who has
no toes
Was placed in a friendly Bark,
And they rowed
back, and carried him up
To his Aunt Jobiska’s Park.
And she made him a
feast, at his earnest wish,
Of eggs and
buttercups fried with fish;
And she said, “The
whole world knows,
That Pobbles are
happier without their toes.”
Sean Crawford
Calgary
March
2015
Update: The above mentioned book is now yellow, at least the “teacher mastermind editions” (sic) is, and it’s called The Now Habit, henceforth called the “book.” The aforementioned author is Neil Fiore, Ph.D. The “book” is subtitled “A strategic program for overcoming procrastination and enjoying guilt-free play.”
Actually, the “book” uses all sorts of upper case letters in the subtitle, but since they also tried to capitalize the “h” in “Ph.D” I subjectively feel little need to follow suite. At least, such is the logic in THO (the humble opinion) of the undesigned,
Sean Crawford.
epi-thought: If ever you see me among grad students, with those painful "seaweed on the legs" board shorts, I will be the one wearing a French-boy bathing suit, sans guilt.
Note: My computer is not set up for pen and ink signatures, so just pretend I signed it, OK?
No comments:
Post a Comment