Friday is always a mixed-up day as the cleaning lady is here. She's very efficient but it mucks up my routine. I like to keep out of her way but that means avoiding the computer and my comfortable lounge chair. The house is too small to avoid her completely and it's a bit cold to sit outside but we do our best. She's gone now so I can get on with what I had planned for today: blog post, collect my car from Jamie's, collect a few groceries from the local supermarket and put my feet up for the rest of the day.
Apparently, today or tomorrow is Battle of Britain Day and there is to be a flyover by the Roulettes at about 3.50. I hope we might see a bit of that.
FACES IN THE STREET
Evolutionists tell us that the most successful members of
the animal kingdom are those who can live and work together cooperatively. Animals which can work as a team in hunting
their prey bring home more food for their young. Huge swarms of fish might attract predators
but the very size of the shoal and the sheer number of individuals in their
group means there is a better chance that an individual fish will live to swim
another day. Even something as simple as
animals being able to huddle together for warmth in cold weather might mean the
difference between life and death.
Historians tell us that it is our innate abilty to live
cooperatively which has made the human race so successful in populating the
world. We are able to work together to
solve problems, create innovation, plan huge development projects and, of
course wage wars. There is no doubt, we are very good at working together with
colleagues to get things done. But what
about the others, the ones we don’t know intimately or even casually, the
strangers, the men and women behind the faces in the street?
We hardly notice them, do we, those faces in the street, as
we walk along? We keep our own faces
looking vaguely downward, our gaze averted, our eyes hooded as if we are
fearful of being recognised. Are we
frightened to draw attention to ourselves?
Is there safety in anonymity?
Why are we like this, so ashamed to look our fellow-citizens
in the eye? Our mothers warned us not to
talk to strangers, but is that enough to explain our antipathy to those who are
not part of our circle of friendship? Is
shyness a factor or is it the result of the stress of living in our
high-powered, dog-eat-dog society?
Maybe we’re frightened that the infection which stalks the
streets of the US will come to us here in our little city on the edge of the
world - 197 gun deaths in St Louis, Missouri last year. What effect would something like that have
here in Launceston? I remember the movie
quote, “You talkin’ to me?”, fair warning that to make eye contact, let alone
initiate a conversation can have dire consequences. It certainly doesn’t pay to take chances.
We’ve all met those well-meaning individuals who go out of
their way to be friends with everyone, the ones who have unrealistic
expectations that a stranger is just a friend you haven’t met yet, who actually
say things like that and are surprised when you look at them as if they are
mad.
I’ve occasionally thought that I should institute a new
approach to co-existing with my fellow-man.
No longer would I hide myself in a cloak of anonymity, afraid to make
eye contact in case someone takes my fleeting glance as an invitation to start
a conversation. I’d be ready to embrace
new friendships, believing that most people are basically good and kind, and
anxious to become another part of my friendship circle.
But, of course, that’s not how the world works. Man is a co-operative animal, it’s true, but
he’s also a tribal one. Innately, we
believe in ‘them’ and ‘us’. ‘Us’ are the
people in our family and immediate circle, ‘them’ is everybody else, the faces
in the street, if you like. Behind their
blank expressions, we can’t know what anxieties and fears and distresses they
are dealing with. When talking about
serial killers after they have been found out, their neighbours always say, “He
seemed such a nice man – quiet, kept to himself but the sort who wouldn’t hurt
a fly.” But, they didn’t know him; he wasn’t one of ‘us’.
I think evolution has served us well. We have evolved from the basic family group
of hunter-gatherers to small bands of cave dwellers to clans and tribes, still
linked by family and customs, to village-dwellers and townsfolk, to city
dwellers. Through all of this, we have
kept our innate suspicion of the stranger, the unknown face in the street. This reserved attitude has served us well and
we would be foolish to abandon it too quickly.
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