Stone Age Brain,
Space Age Culture
by Mickey Z.
I was recently asked to do a short reading at Art House Astoria (where I will be leading a writing workshop or two very soon). This is what I chose to read:
Huddled around flickering candles and eating food before it could
spoil, longtime neighbors introduced themselves, discovering
similarities and answering the question of the day:
“Where were you when
the lights went out?”
They were asking this, of course, during the big
blackout of August 14, 2003, but I’m getting a little ahead of myself.
This story begins in the stars…
Living in New York City, I often have the opportunity to see stars.
They’re everywhere: at cafés, boutiques, movie premieres, health clubs,
& other such earthbound venues. Check the gossip columns if you
don’t believe me.
When the blackout of ’03 dimmed the mighty skyline, however, I could
suddenly see stars simply by looking up…zillions of them blinking at me
from beyond the unlit skyscrapers.
Traffic lights were out of commission, but to the southeast, Mars provided the only red light we really needed.
By odd coincidence, our crimson neighbor was closer to Earth than
ever before and the power outage gave us Easterners an excellent view of
Mars’s southern hemisphere from a mere 34.6 million miles
away—34,646,418.5 miles to be exact, but who measures in the middle of a
blackout?
Still, even with the stars twinkling above and little green Martians
close enough to reach out and shake my hand, it was when I returned my
gaze back down to the streets that I truly couldn’t believe my eyes.
Strolling through Astoria as the sun set that clammy evening, one could
witness a sight even more uncommon than any celestial spectacle.
My neighbors had abandoned their post-modern pace and begun listening
to their primitive instincts. All across the darkened city, Big Apple
inhabitants stopped hustling. They sat still and talked to each other.
No computers, no televisions, no telephones…just face-to-face
communication (even if it was too dark at times to actually see faces).
This unforeseen solidarity was somehow accomplished without the
assistance of Twitter or Facebook. Money didn’t change hands, no cell
phone radiation was emitted, no air was conditioned.
Under a sky full of stars and a visiting red space-mate, it was
miraculously possible to re-connect to our more prehistoric roots and
encounter the sort of life we may have evolved to live back in the
“caveman” days.
Our modern caves, the subterranean tunnels of transportation known as
“the subway,” were virtually empty that night but the concrete jungle
above them might as well have been the Savannah of ancient Africa. The
tribes of Astoria sat around fires, sharing food and communal stories.
Some even beat on drums.
In times like this, it’s easier to appreciate that we each possess a
physiology that evolved to negotiate the Stone Age. Inconveniently, we
live in the Space Age. Therein lies the rub. We are urban cavemen (and
cavewomen, of course)—overmatched in our daily crusade to navigate an
artificial reality because we have lost contact with our nature.
For one thing, we likely didn’t evolve to be surrounded by this many
people. Thus, in our futile search for a manageable tribe, we preserve
our attention for a handful of fellow humans. What’s vexing is how to
deal with the other few million humans who are not in our tribe…but
still in our face.
Subsequently, we inventive mortals have cultivated the astounding
ability to simply pretend that other people aren’t there. Our non-tribe
members are henceforth bequeathed sub-human status and are hastily
disregarded.
Here’s what the noted zoologist Desmond Morris said about this form of universal denial:
“In the busy streets, you develop human traffic skills of amazing
dexterity. In crowded buses, trains, and elevators, you acquire a blank
stare. You have eyes only for those you know. This enables you to enjoy
the varied delights of the big city while mentally re-creating a
personal tribe existence.”
But, dear Desmond, what happens when those streets aren’t busy…like, say, during the worst blackout in U.S. history?
We may have eyes only for those we know, but what about when it’s too shadowy to tell the difference?
With our vision impaired enough to create the illusion of intimacy
and our vaunted technology no longer at our overworked fingertips, this
urban caveman got a taste of a different life and a potentially
different culture.
Sure, things returned to “normal” by the next day, but the experience left some of us wondering just what “normal” means.
The last time Mars got this close to Earth was 60,000 years ago…an
age when stars were easy to find and one could cause a blackout by
simply dousing the fire.
In a mere 280 or so years, the extraterrestrial lady in red will once
again be 34,646,418.5 miles away. I wonder what kind (if any) of
earthly human culture will be there to greet her.
Mickey Z. is probably the only person on the planet to have
appeared in both a karate flick with Billy “Tae Bo” Blanks and a
political book with Howard Zinn. He is the author of 9 books—most
recently Self Defense for Radicals and his second novel, Dear Vito—and can be found on the Web at http://www.mickeyz.net.
Mickey Z is a regular columnist for Novakeo.com