Remembering laughter

“Try not to laugh.”

When I was six, I had surgery for a double hernia. Two weak areas of muscle in the lower abdominal wall, present from birth, needed repair. I don’t remember much about the experience, aside from counting backwards while receiving anesthesia, waking up on a cold gurney in a hospital hallway, and a bedside visit that evening by my father and uncle. From the perspective of a six year-old, there was nothing funny about the ordeal. It was scary (especially when I got short of breath counting backwards) and it was serious, real serious (the boy in the hospital bed next to me the night before my surgery was recovering from a head injury after crashing his bike at high speed).

And it was painful. The hernias themselves had never hurt. But the surgical fix, a procedure involving stretching and resewing layers of muscle together, sure did. I have no recollection of the surgeon or the nurses or anyone who worked in the hospital. I do, however, remember the advice that someone told my mother when I was lying foggy-brained in the hospital corridor. Moving was good but it would make the pain worse. Ice cream helped. I was to feel lucky that I wasn’t the boy in the other hospital bed. And I should try not to laugh.

There is nothing in my memory between the hallway and the evening meal. I am simply there, curled up under crisp white sheets, my head on one but two pillows. My father and uncle have just arrived. It is after dinner. Dad has parked his wheelchair at the foot of my bed. My uncle is pacing the room, looking at me, then uneaten food on the dinner tray, then the empty hospital bed next to mine.

“Where’s your roommate?”

“Home,” I burped. How someone could crash his bicycle so badly he needed surgery one week and then go home the next was a wonder to me. I didn’t tell that though to my uncle or father. Because it hurt to talk. Also, mysteriously, a bowl of Dairy Queen soft-serve ice cream had appeared on my hospital tray. So I braved the two feet of empty space between ice cream and my mouth with a slow, intentional reach. Two spoonfuls of cold vanilla later, I realized that my visitors were enjoying the view from their side of the room. That wasn’t surprising: my uncle had a way of looking like he always saw something on the horizon, even if the visibility was poor or the space was small. And my father used to watch him and wait for an inevitably unexpected observation.

“Better than the alternative,” my uncle smiled.

What alternative? That didn’t seem like a nice thing to say. Had he heard about the kid? The boy’s head had been all wrapped up in gauze. He had crashed his bike going almost sixty miles-per-hour down a hill (he had told me that himself). He had talked almost as fast as he rode a bike.

The pair of male mentors in my life must have sensed a bit too much ernestness from the hospital room’s remaining occupant. No doubt I had the early version of that jutting jaw I get when think something is serious. So, alas, they started into their unique version of a hospital comedy routine. Alone, neither was very funny. Together, they were unusually comical. An odd couple. Just like my favorite TV and film duo, Laurel and Hardy.

There’s probably no need for me to finish the story. Of course they made me laugh. Of course it hurt. Of course the ice cream and the laughter made me feel better.

We live in such serious times. A pandemic, political and social discord, dramatic climate-caused calamity – the year has not had much cause for joy. Unfortunately, there aren’t many indicators that the next few months will be a whole lot better. Previously, I have written about the importance of respectful action in response to appropriate feelings of outrage. Some people have asked me how I can reconcile recognition of an emotion as powerful as outrage with an encouragement to publicly engage with purpose, with accountability, with deliberation. There is a palpable dissonance in the space between such intensity of emotion (“outrage”) and the recommended response (“thoughtful action”). The gap can feel like an unbridgeable void.

That’s where we need to remember laughter. No, there is nothing funny about bigotry, inequity, and injustice. There is no humor in hatred. But we named ourselves sapiens for a reason. We have the ability to recognize emotion, to name it, to respond in ways that demonstrate reflection, planning. Being wise means so much more than being cognitively conscious. It means being responsible. Considerate. Goal-oriented. Collaborative.

It also means being funny. Wit and comedy are not for many circumstances. There are proper times for anger, for fear, for tears, and for solemnity. There must be ample time for outrage. But there must regularly be time to laugh – at ourselves, at each other, at our propensity for foolishness. We are an odd species. We have the ability to inhabit multiple planets in our solar system – or destroy everything we so often say we cherish. The birth lottery is ruthless for many. Any yet happiness does not seem restricted for those with material wealth and means. In fact, people with measurably less frequently find greater satisfaction and fulfillment. There is no foolproof formula for life. There is only the time we have to breathe and the learning that we have opportunity to share during that breathing.

Let us then keep finding ways to hold ourselves accountable while lifting, always lifting, eternally lifting and holding each other up. There should be joy that comes with being. There must be gratitude holding hands with disappointment. There should be miracle found within a good belly laugh.

Something painful doesn’t always need to hurt.

ColLABORate

The Franklin Institute in Philadelphia was my favorite museum as a child. Please, don’t be impressed: I did not necessarily like or frequent museums. They seemed tiring, so much standing and shuffling without a destination. How can exercise that is so easy tire a person so quickly? My mind couldn’t understand what my body knew all too well. A museum was usually less interesting than the bus ride to it. By the time a boy my age reached the top of the building’s first staircase, he had been told not to run, shout, jump, or talk at least a dozen times. Rules sapped enthusiasm as fast as kryptonite immobilized Superman.

But not at the Franklin Institute. There were things to do at the Franklin, exhibits to touch, limits to test. You could walk through a beating heart. You could shove a steel ball and watch what happened to the other objects lined up behind it. You could stand in front of a painting about illusions and watch the light in your eyes buzz.

“I don’t see it.” She’s right there. “I only see the old lady.” Look, look. Don’t you see her? She’s right there.

We were exploring the optical illusion section. Hanging in the air were canvases with pen and ink lines that seemed to sizzle. Waves of black and white forms disoriented the sense of balance. A drawing of a hook-nosed old lady was supposed to look like a beautiful woman if you turned your head and eyes in the right way. To a young boy who could only see the hag, it was an embarrassing challenge. Some of my classmates said they saw the profile of a beautiful woman. My eyes could only decipher the big nose and jutting chin of a crone who seemed straight out of a bad fairy tale.

Look! someone told me. Just look! She’s right there.

Right there. Beauty hung before me and all I could see was its opposite. The story of my life. Perfect

So I stood there. And I willed that princess to come into view. I focused and I focused. I narrowed my eyes, turned my face, clenched my fists, and burned a laser beam of intent at the elderly bulbous nose that dominated my consciousness. You will become beautiful. You WILL become beautiful. I worked hard to see the metamorphosis. When it still failed to occur, I almost faked my ability to see it. An eight year-old boy does not easily admit to friends that he cannot see the exposed long neck of a beautiful woman and risk a bus ride home filled with jibes about how he prefers ugly old ladies to mysterious young women.

Gently, someone helped. I don’t recall who it was. There is simply an echo in my memory of someone my age, a girl I think, quietly standing beside me. I can almost hear that voice suggest how, if I imagined that the old nose was a chin and then let my view go soft, I might, yes, maybe I could see that the right eyelashes of the old woman were the left eyelashes of –

A princess. I saw her! She had not been there. No. She had not existed, there had only been her opposite, and then, in an instant, she had always been there, youth shadowed by its future, the hag perhaps the princess years later following decades of regal wonder and majesty. Before me eyes, the crone transformed herself into an elderly queen. I could see both young and old. I sensed beauty stretched across the spectrum of a single life time.

I did not use those words when I re-identified the crooked nose of the old lady as the exposed jawline and neck of the graceful, young woman. First I had to prove to friends that I really saw her. Once convinced, they were off to the next challenge. Then I stayed behind, for a moment without boundaries, practicing my newfound vision. Over an over, I made my internal viewfinder flip the perspectives, back and forth, like a new form of exercise, a training for my brain so that it would not lose its ability to see the averted gaze of youth hidden behind the sagging profile of age. To this day, I still enjoy the drill. It feels good to appreciate the benefits of a nimble consciousness. It is reassuring to experience the freedom of an open mind.

It takes work. Labor. There is a myth in the modern human story that what we become is based on what we will to happen, that our successes in life are a direct result of our individual effort. You or I work. And so you or I succeed. While personal fortitude is often prerequisite to certain types of outcome, it is inadequate – necessary yet insufficient – for achievement of a higher order, for fulfillment of purpose beyond your or my aggrandizement of wealth and material goods. You and I are more than what you or I do alone. When we co-labor, when we co-labor-ate, so much more is possible.

Some things are so obvious – when we notice them. It can take work, however, to notice. There is labor involved in observation. I may think that my job is to do things alone, to reach insights independently, to make things happen for myself. Subsequently, if and when I taste accomplishment, I may misinterpret the experience as uniquely my own, perhaps even aspire to share my insights about perseverance and performance with you, offering you help in your own path. It is easy to mistake arrivals as evidence of individual effort. We miss opportunities for real progress when we overlook the destinies only possible through co-creation.

My boyhood ability to fully read the optical illusion at the Franklin Institute represents a simple yet sublime example of collaboration. Like the duality of the young and old woman, the beauty nestled within the mystery of this world is that we travel best when we journey together. Our collective actions manifest an emerging common purpose. Our co-labor offers new perspective on what is possible when we work as one.