A Man's Biggest Fear
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
DIGG THIS
Autumn in the
South is gloriously beautiful. Okay, people don't really call it
"autumn" here, or rather, those who do are trying to affect some
high-brow or Northern sense of things, or trying to find a good
lead for an article. Here we call this season "fall," from the fact
that the leaves fall from the trees.
In any case,
back to the beauty part. People like to walk in the park in the
crisp, cool air, and speak with each other of the stunning natural
scenes of leaves changing color. Ah, yes, and observe the groups
of people playing in the park. They play games like basketball,
baseball, football, and soccer.
But I'm going
to reveal an unusual fact here of which you may or may not be aware.
This scene gives rise to a man's greatest fear.
The fear is
that while walking along and enjoying the day, a ball from one of
these groups will inadvertently roll your way. Everyone on the team
has his eye on that ball, which is now at your feet. You must pick
up the ball and return it to the team in a manner fitting to the
game.
So, for example,
you can't kick a baseball or basketball back. You have to throw
the baseball with accuracy to the guy holding up the glove. The
basketball must be returned with one of those two-hand push things
and done in a manner that defies gravity. The football must be returned
so that it flies like a bullet with no odd twists and turns. The
soccer ball must be kicked bang on and straight to the person who
awaits its return.
This trick
must be performed without any warm up whatsoever. As a man, you
must be able to instantly become the greatest player of the game
in question. Why must you do this? Because…well, because you are
a man!
For any man,
this instills a sense of complete terror. Some men are so frozen
by the prospect of screwing up that they pretend not to see the
ball at all, which is a jerky thing to do. But it's better to be
regarded as a jerk than a complete incompetent.
Why incompetence?
Here is the problem. You might throw a baseball perfectly well 99
times out of 100. You can practice and practice and increase your
skill. But the one time that you return the ball in a crazy, catawampus,
incompetent way is that very time at the park (you only have one
chance!) when you are called upon to return the stray ball to the
team playing in the park.
The trouble
is that this one time is what defines your life! It is the
only thing that all the guys playing in the park know about you.
"Oh, you are the guy who overthrew the baseball by like 15 feet!
Sheesh!"
So here you
are with 10 or even 20 guys looking at you to see how you perform
this feat. They are all pumped with that guy stuff that makes them
feel strong and powerful, with shirts off to display their sweaty
chests. You, on the other hand, are dressed in a polo shirt and
admiring the fall colors and the trees and engaging in clever banter
with the girl next to you. This is not a level playing field.
There is a very strong chance that you are going to screw this up.
Your incompetence
will not only be obvious to the guys on the team playing in the
park. It will be abundantly on display to the person with whom you
are walking that, while you might be smart and clever and thoughtful
in some way, you are only half the man that these guys playing football
are.
In short, we
are speaking here of complete and total and irredeemable public
humiliation! It is the sort of thing you never live down. You
can't recreate the moment and do it right. It does no good to yell
to them: "usually I'm pretty good at throwing footballs!" They will
just brush such inane protests off. Everyone has already seen your
"talent" and it was a disgrace.
Instead they
will think: "It's bad enough that the ball wandered from our playing
field. But then that geek had to pick it up and try to throw it
back, and we ended up having to chase it again after his screw up."
Nor is it enough to be good at baseball and football but not so
hot at basketball, because, sure enough, it will be the basketball
that lands at your feet. No, you must be 100% infallible at all
ball sports in order not to fear this moment, and no mere mortal
is that.
Keep in mind
that you can't prepare for moments like this. You might stroll in
the park day after day for months and it won't happen to you. You
might have five straight years go by and face no obligation to return
a ball. Then one moment, when you least suspect it, you look down
to see a soccer ball at your feet. You look up and see 40 guys staring
at you. You must act, without hesitation.
So you kick.
Your foot glances the top of the ball, and it barely moves. You
are grateful that you aren't on the ground after having tripped
on it. You turn 10 shades of red. You try again and this time the
ball goes in a forward direction but between two players and they
have to run off and get it, and meanwhile everyone else on the team
is staring at you and shaking his head.
You then try
to pick up your life and move on as if nothing terrible has happened.
But the pain in your toe is a reminder. Your temporary limp is also
an indication, even though you try to hide it from all concerned
parties. You act as if this is no big deal but of course you know
in your heart that nothing will ever be the same again. All your
lifetime efforts to build up a certain image for yourself are shattered
in this fateful moment when a stray ball came your way at the park.
Curses on fate! Why do the gods hate us so!?
As
the days move on, growing shorter and shorter into the dead of winter,
the air ever colder and the nights ever longer, there are times
when you awake startled and sweating and realize that you had been
living this moment again and again in your nightmares. Every night
it is the same thing, that recurring moment of terror.
The disapproval
of everyone is more obvious on their faces in the nightmare version
of events than ever in real life. You are surrounded by guys with
disdainful looks. Your girlfriend is standing alongside them, shaking
her head in disgust.
Now that you
have had a look into the mind of a guy, you can see it is never
quite possible to rest easy during these autumn days. The trees
might be beautiful, the air clean and crisp, but that ultimate fear
that every man holds in the darkest regions of his heart lurks just
around the corner, that moment when our pride takes a fatal fall
and, like a leaf once resting securely on a branch of a tree, is
ground to a pulp and vanishes with the wind.
November
8, 2008
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2008 Ludwig von Mises Institute
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