IF I MAY BE SO BOLD
TO ASK –
A CONVERSATION WITH A
READER
James R. Fisher, Jr.,
Ph.D.
© August 7, 2014
REFERENCE:
When you write books,
have a website and blog and fill that blog with missives that reflect what you
are currently thinking, you are bound to get responses, perhaps not as many as
you might expect, given some 10,000 per month read my blog, but a significant
number nonetheless.
I’ve decided to
periodically share one with my readers that might interest them. This is an example in a Q&A format for easy
reading.
Reader: I’m curious, why do you write so much?
Writer: I’ve asked myself that same question. It might seem facetious but it is my way of
connecting first with myself and then with others.
Reader: Don’t you think that is a bit narcissistic?
Writer: I suppose it is.
Reader: You don’t have a problem with that?
Writer: No, do you think I should?
Reader: Duh! Yes, I do.
Writer: Can I ask you a
question? Do you think it is wrong to
first have a conversation with yourself before you have a conversation with
others?
Before you answer, I want you to
think of something, something I write about all the time, and something that
you have commented about before, and that is you feel self-conscious about
being a friend first with yourself before you are with others.
Well, I don’t. I feel there is no way to relate to others
sincerely if you are not first sincere with yourself, which means from my
vantage point that l work out how I feel about a subject in a conversation with
myself, and then it becomes projected as a missive, an insight, or, indeed, a
book.
For example, I have been in constant conversation with
myself since watching President Barak Obama’s News Conference yesterday.
Reader: I know how you feel.
Remember, I’ve been reading you for years.
You can get boring repeating the same stuff
over and over again, but I suppose that’s because you don’t think we’re
listening. We are but we don’t have your
confidence.
Please, no lecture on
confidence! But I do want to hear what
you think about the president’s news conference. I was working and didn’t have a chance to see
it. I hear he really dropped the ball,
right?
Writer: Sad. After
hearing the president, I feel sad. I
admire him for standing there before pundits, critics, journalist, and of
course the nation as well as the world, and not retreating into his cage. That’s what most of us do when we are under great
stress, and the president clearly is under such stress.
He is between a rock and a hard place, damned if he makes an
emphatic declaration about this or that, and damned if he doesn’t.
He is, I believe, by temperament and
inclination an intellectual if not a scholar.
He would have been much happier, I believe, as an academic or a
novelist. He write quite well.
Reader: Don’t leave it at that.
If you want to know, that is something that infuriates me about
you.
You bring up these unsettling subjects,
like the president’s new conference, then you walk away with some irrelevancy, leaving
the poor reader in the lurch having to work it out for himself. I don’t care about his temperament. Why do you do this?
Writer: Why do I do it?
I do it because I don’t have answers for you nor does anyone else. Life is all about working out what has meaning,
has significance to us.
We have to do the heavy lifting or what we have is a Presidential
News Conference in which everyone expects “that man in charge,” “the most
powerful man in the world” to distill the quagmire, solve the conundrum to
everyone’s satisfaction when he is not capable of such a deed.
No man is.
No man ever was. But we have this
myth in our head that this one man can do that for us. He can’t.
The sad part of this dilemma is that he is trying to do just that to the
pleasure of no one.
Reader: So, what would you have him do? What would you have us do?
Writer: Simple. Start
taking charge of your own life.
Support the president in what you believe, give him credit
when that is the case, and write him or your Congressman about how you feel in
both instances, but do it politely, respectfully, and sincerely.
Become an active participant in democracy, not a rotten egg
thrower from the comfort of a crowd.
Don’t buy into something because you think most other people
buy into it, and therefore you are consistent with the pack. Take a stand, have a point of view, share it
if you like, but don’t be hesitant to communicate it to people who represent
you, and are charged with carrying out your wishes in this democracy.
Reader: Yeah, yeah, now you’re sounding like one of your
missives. I get all that. You don’t have to club me to death with that –
I was going to say with all that crap, but that would be disrespectful, wouldn’t
it?
Writer: It would be honest, honest I like. And do you know why?
It is not for me but for you. If you can be honest with me, chances are you
will be honest with yourself. If I may,
I am tired of people trying to say what they think I want to hear. I am not running a popularity contest.
In my last innings, I’m trying to experience
life and people and events – not as they are framed on the media or by politicians
or academics or pundits – as they are experienced by each of us on a personal
basis.
Reader: Can I change the subject? Actually, it is not so much changing the
subject but bringing the subject back to what I planned to ask you, but as you
do so well, getting me to go off on a tangent.
You say that 10,000 people a month respond to your blog, is that right?
Writer: Yes, so?
Reader: Is that
mainly an American audience?
Writer: What do you think?
Reader: Come on, doc, don’t do that answering a question with a
question. I sincerely want to know. Is that sincere enough?
Writer: My primary audience, it may surprise you, is the
Ukraine, followed by the United States, then Great Britain, Western Europe,
Russia and China.
To my surprise, I have
only a little audience from Canada, virtually no audience from Central and
South America, or Australia.
All my
missives can be quickly and easily translated into the language of the country,
which I think facilitates the interest in those mentioned.
Reader: Ukraine? Ukraine
is a bigger audience than the United States?
How do you explain that?
Writer: I can’t. All I
can tell you is that I have great affection for the Slavic peoples.
I have had the opportunity to visit the
Balkans: Serbia, Romania, Kosovo, Albania and Croatia.
I have also had an opportunity to visit the Slavic nations
of the Baltic Sea such as Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, as well as
Russia.
I’ve never been to the Ukraine, but as an American I try to
put myself in their shoes. They are a
proud people under siege, a people with a proud tradition that has been
constantly challenged over the centuries, and yet national pride persists and survives.
I have wondered, though, if Ukrainians have a Thomas Paine to capture the
essence of their struggle as he did for the Minute Men of the American Revolution.
King George III of Great Britain was a bully like
Vladimir Putin, and yet he was defeated.
The will of a people is greater than all the guns that may
be menacingly camped on their border as is the case with Russian troops on the
border of Eastern Ukraine.
You cannot kill the soul of a people. This is a lesson that tyrants never learn. The more tyrants attempt to crush that spirit
the greater that spirit grows in a vengeance.
Writer: Please. I don't need a sermon. I get it. But quite frankly, I don’t see it as our
problem. I’m for the president to stand
down, period, as President Eisenhower did when the French and British bombed
the Suez Canal. We didn’t go to war, the
canal was rebuilt, and life went on.
CONCLUSION:
I thanked him for a stimulating conversation, but didn’t add
– he’ll probably read this here – that I now understood the reason the
president leads from behind.
Americans are tired of wars, tired of the rhetoric of wars,
tired of Americans dying in such places as Afghanistan and Iraq, and for what
purpose, tired of being policeman to the world, tired of having the role of
controlling the bullies of the world, tired of carrying the financial burden of
the United Nations, tired of Europe including Great Britain playing both sides
of the street, while letting the United States foot the bill, tired of all the
diplomatic mistakes after WWI and WWII, playing landlord to the Middle East while
countries and peoples were Gerrymandered to the satisfaction of the Allies, but
not to the satisfaction of the indigenous peoples, just plain tired.
Several presidents – of both political parties – put the
United States and the World into this cage, and now a President of the United
States in the person of Barak Obama stands before an audience in a news
conference yesterday, and he has to take the heat because he’s the only one in
the kitchen.
My reader is not insensitive, I don’t believe, he is simply
tired. He has been employed, unemployed
and re-employed, making less than he formerly made, and he is too tired to be
bitter, too tired to worry about
Ukrainians, Israelis, Palestinians, Syrians, Iraqis, Turks
and Jordanians, much less the bloodshed in Africa.
It is too much!
If he weren’t so tired, I would have liked to tell him that
these people are tired, too, only being tired is not their greatest challenge,
living for another day is.
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