It started out innocently enough.
I began to think at parties now and then to loosen up. Inevitably
though, one thought led to another,
and soon I was more than just a social thinker.
I began to think alone - "to relax,"
I told myself - but I knew it wasn't true. Thinking became more
and more important to me, and finally
I was thinking all the time.
I began to think on the job. I knew that thinking and employment don't mix, but I couldn't stop myself.
I began to avoid friends at lunchtime
so I could read Thoreau and Kafka. I would return to the office
dizzied and confused, asking, "What
is it exactly we are doing here?".
Things weren't going so great at
home either. One evening I had turned off the TV and asked my wife
about the meaning of life. She spent
that night at her mother's.
I soon had a reputation as a heavy
thinker. One day the boss called me in. He said, "Skippy, I like you,
and it hurts me to say this, but
your thinking has become a real problem. If you don't stop thinking on
the job, you'll have to find another
job." This gave me a lot to think about.
I came home early after my conversation with the boss. "Honey," I confessed, "I've been thinking..."
"I know you've been thinking," she said, "and I want a divorce!"
"But Honey, surely it's not that serious."
"It is serious," she said, lower
lip aquiver. "You think as much as college professors, and college
professors don't make any money,
so if you keep on thinking we won't have any money!"
"That's a faulty syllogism," I said
impatiently, and she began to cry. I'd had enough. "I'm going to the
library," I snarled as I stomped
out the door.
I headed for the library, in the
mood for some Nietzsche, with a PBS station on the radio. I roared
into the parking lot and ran up
to the big glass doors... they didn't open. The library was closed.
To this day, I believe that a Higher Power was looking out for me that night.
As I sank to the ground clawing at
the unfeeling glass, whimpering for Zarathustra, a poster caught
my eye. "Friend, is heavy thinking
ruining your life?" it asked. You probably recognize that line. It
comes from the standard Thinker's
Anonymous poster.
Which is why I am what I am today:
a recovering thinker. I never miss a TA meeting. At each meeting
we watch a non-educational video;
last week it was "Porky's." Then we share experiences about how
we avoided thinking since the last
meeting.
I still have my job, and things are
a lot better at home. Life just seemed... easier, somehow, as soon as
I stopped thinking.