Taking Attendance
I flew to London a few weeks later. I was
covering Wimbledon, the world's premier tennis competition and one of the few
events I go to where the crowd never boos and no one is drunk in the parking
lot.
England was warm and cloudy, and each
morning I walked the treelined streets near the tennis courts, passing
teenagers cued up for leftover tickets and vendors selling strawberries and
cream. Outside the gate was a newsstand that sold a halfdozen colorful British
tabloids, featuring photos of topless women, paparazzi pictures of the royal
family, horoscopes, sports, lottery contests, and a wee bit of actual news.
Their top headline of the day was written on a small chalkboard that leaned
against the latest stack of papers, and usually read something like DIANA IN
ROW WITH CHARLES! or GAZZA TO TEAM: GIVE ME MILLIONS!
People scooped up these tabloids,
devoured their gossip, and on previous trips to England, I had always done the
same. But now, for some reason, I found myself thinking about Morrie whenever I
read anything silly or mindless. I kept picturing him there, in the house with
the Japanese maple and the hardwood floors, counting his breath, squeezing out
every moment with his loved ones, while I spent so many hours on things that
meant absolutely nothing to me personally: movie stars, supermodels, the latest
noise out of Princess Di or Madonna or John F. Kennedy, Jr. In a strange way, I
envied the quality of Morrie's time even as I lamented its diminishing supply.
Why did we, bother with all the distractions we did? Back home, the O. J.
Simpson trial was in full swing, and there were people who surrendered their
entire lunch hours watching it, then taped the rest so they could watch more at
night. They didn't know O. J. Simpson. They didn't know anyone involved in the
case. Yet they gave up days and weeks of their lives, addicted to someone
else's drama.
I remembered what Morrie said during our
visit: "The culture we have does not make people feel good about
themselves. And you have to be strong enough to say if the culture doesn't
work, don't buy it."
Morrie, true to these words, had
developed his own culture-long before he got sick. Discussion groups, walks
with friends, dancing to his music in the Harvard Square church. He started a
project called Greenhouse, where poor people could receive mental health
services. He read books to find new ideas for his classes, visited with
colleagues, kept up with old students, wrote letters to distant friends. He took
more time eating and looking at nature and wasted no time in front of TV
sitcoms or "Movies of the Week." He had created a cocoon of human
activities-conversation, interaction, affection-and it filled his life like an
overflowing soup bowl.
I had also developed my own culture.
Work. I did four or five media jobs in England, juggling them like a clown. I
spent eight hours a day on a computer, feeding my stories back to the States.
Then I did TV pieces, traveling with a crew throughout parts of London. I also
phoned in radio reports every morning and afternoon. This was not an abnormal
load. Over the years, I had taken labor as my companion and had moved
everything else to the side.
In Wimbledon; I ate meals at my little
wooden work cubicle and thought nothing of it. On one particularly crazy day, a
crush of reporters had tried to chase down Andre Agassi and his famous
girlfriend, Brooke Shields, and I had gotten knocked over by a British
photographer who barely muttered "Sorry" before sweeping past, his
huge metal lenses strapped around his neck. I thought of something else Morrie
had told me: "So many people walk around with a meaningless life. They
seem half-asleep, even when they're busy doing things they think are important.
This is because they're chasing the wrong things. The way you get meaning into
your life is to devote yourself to loving others, devote yourself to your
community around you, and devote yourself to creating something that gives you
purpose and meaning."
I knew he was right.
Not that I did anything about it.
At the end of the tournament-and the
countless cups of coffee I drank to get through it-I closed my computer,
cleaned out my cubicle, and went back to the apartment to pack. It was late.
The TV was nothing but fuzz.
I flew to Detroit, arrived late in the
afternoon, dragged myself home and went to sleep. I awoke to a jolting piece of
news: the unions at my newspaper had gone on strike. The place was shut down.
There were picketers at the front entrance and marchers chanting up and down
the street. As a member of the union, I had no choice: I was suddenly, and for
the first time in my life, out of a job, out of a paycheck, and pitted against
my employers. Union leaders called my home and warned me against any contact
with my former editors, many of whom were my friends, telling me to hang up if
they tried to call and plead their case.
"We're going to fight until we
win!" the union leaders swore, sounding like soldiers.
I felt confused and depressed. Although
the TV and radio work were nice supplements, the newspaper had been my
lifeline, my oxygen; when I saw my stories in print in each morning, I knew
that, in at least one way, I was alive.
Now it was gone. And as the strike
continued-the first day, the second day, the third day-there were worried phone
calls and rumors that this could go on for months. Everything I had known was
upside down. There were sporting events each night that I would have gone to
cover. Instead, I stayed home, watched them on TV. I had grown used to thinking
readers somehow needed my column. I was stunned at how easily things went on
without me.
After a week of this, I picked up the
phone and dialed Morrie's number. Connie brought him to the phone. "You're
coming to visit me," he said, less a question than a statement.
Well. Could I?
"How about Tuesday?"
Tuesday would be good, I said. Tuesday
would be fine.
In my sophomore year, I take two more of
his courses. We go beyond the classroom, meeting now and then just to talk. I
have never done this before with an adult who was not a relative, yet I feel comfortable
doing it with Morrie, and he seems comfortable making the time.
"Where shall we visit today?"
he asks cheerily when I enter his office.
In the spring, we sit under a tree outside
the sociology building, and in the winter, we sit by his desk, me in my gray
sweatshirts and Adidas sneakers, Morrie in Rockport shoes and corduroy pants.
Each time we talk, lie listens to me ramble, then he tries to pass on some sort
of life lesson. He warns me that money is not the most important thing,
contrary to the popular view on campus. He tells me I need to be "fully
human." He speaks of the alienation of youth and the need for
"connectedness" with the society around me. Some of these things I
understand, some I do not. It makes no difference. The discussions give me an
excuse to talk to him, fatherly conversations I cannot have with my own father,
who would like me to be a lawyer.
Morrie hates lawyers.
"What do you want to do when you get
out of college?" he asks.
I want to be a musician, I say. Piano
player. "Wonderful," he says. "But that's a hard life."
Yeah.
"A lot of sharks." That's what
I hear.
"Still," he says, "if you
really want it, then you'll make your dream happen. "
I want to hug him, to thank him for
saying that, but I am not that open. I only nod instead.
"I'll bet you play piano with a lot
of pep," he says. I laugh. Pep?
He laughs back. "Pep. What's the
matter? They don't say that anymore?"
TUESDAYS WITH MORRIE (8)
Reviewed by Afrianto Budi
on
Senin, April 02, 2012
Rating:
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