Comic Strip of the Day

CSotD: Your flexibility is the first thing to go

Betfrds
"Between Friends" is more a "chuckle of recognition" than "burst of laughter" strip, a genre which takes a certain touch of insight if it's going to rise above "guys always leave the toilet seat up" observational so-whatness. Sandra Bell-Lundy, fortunately, has that touch.

Which is to say, sometimes it's more of a sigh than a chuckle. The girls have been trying for the entire week to plan a quick getaway, but, while they all want to get away, "quick" has become something of an issue, as has the definition of just what a "getaway" consists of.

Part of Lundy's craft is that only Maeve would ask "What has happened to us?" 

The most disheartening sigh of all comes from how readily the other two are able to answer the question. Perhaps a decade ago, they'd have wondered, but now they have their reasons right at hand, and they don't introduce them as "Oh good lord, you're right, what has happened to us?" but as actual answers. 

Sigh, indeed.

Here's what we're not talking about: Over in another of my favorite female-penned strips, Stone Soup, Joan and Wally are off on a trip to Paris, but not without the past week-and-a-half having featured Joan's unwillingness to leave the kids in the capable and familiar hands of her sister and mother.

Ss130327
But this is not stodginess. This is a guilt-and-insecurity issue related to workaholism.

It is a commonplace to say that workaholics refuse to take vacations because they fear their employers will find out that the place can get along without them. I don't buy it: I think it's because they fear that they will find out the place can get along without them.

If Val and Evie want to be kind, they'll rub some dirt and spaghetti sauce on the kids before they pick Joan and Wally up from the airport at the end of the trip.

That's a different matter, however, than simply not being flexible enough to make a plan on the spur of the moment, and, while Susan and Kim could, technically, plead parenthood as an excuse, it would be a stretch: their kids are in middle school and high school respectively and their husbands are supportive.

No, they aren't guilt-stricken. They're just stuck in the mud.

Nor is this about overall life-altering flexibility. Maeve isn't proposing that they all quit their jobs and strike out on some kind of odyssey. 

That's a whole other topic, which sparked this reasonably epic rant last year. I sometimes think about getting a camper and hitting the road, but I remember how, when I went footloose in the Sixties, I lasted about a week before I looked for a room to rent. Lease-free turned out to be all the rootlessness I wanted.

I felt somewhat guilty about that over the years, until "Travels With Charley" was proven to be largely bullshit. Now I'm okay with it.

No, we're talking more about just having the flexibility to head down to Pamplona for a few days of fiesta and bullfighting. 

When I read "The Sun Also Rises" at 20, I was totally enamored with Brett Ashley and the whole scene, and I wasn't alone. Young men my age were buying botas and filling them with bad wine, and I even knew a guy who moved to Paris for a year or two to write.

I knew, even at 20, that being in Paris would not improve the quality of your prose, but I had broken up with a Brett Ashley of my own about a year before, and it wasn't until I re-read the book in my early 40s that I realized how very, very, very lucky I was to have done so. 

Still, yet another 20 years down the road, I have picked up enough of archy the cockroach to think there is something sad in having become so freaking wise and cautious.

As it happens, my father, who was 48 at the time, turned me on to this archy poem shortly after he met my version of Lady Brett Ashley. He didn't mention her specifically, but neither was it a coincidence: 

i was talking to a moth
the other evening
he was trying to break into
an electric light bulb
and fry himself on the wires

why do you fellows
pull this stunt i asked him
because it is the conventional
thing for moths or why
if that had been an uncovered
candle instead of an electric
light bulb you would
now be a small unsightly cinder
have you no sense

plenty of it he answered
but at times we get tired
of using it
we get bored with the routine
and crave beauty
and excitement
fire is beautiful
and we know that if we get
too close it will kill us
but what does that matter
it is better to be happy
for a moment
and be burned up with beauty
than to live a long time
and be bored all the while
so we wad all our life up
into one little roll
and then we shoot the roll
that is what life is for
it is better to be a part of beauty
for one instant and then to cease to
exist than to exist forever
and never be a part of beauty
our attitude toward life
is to come easy go easy
we are like human beings
used to be before they became
too civilized to enjoy themselves

and before i could argue him
out of his philosophy
he went and immolated himself
on a patent cigar lighter
i do not agree with him
myself i would rather have
half the happiness and twice
the longevity

but at the same time i wish
there was something i wanted
as badly as he wanted to fry himself

 

 

AND SPEAKING OF MOTHS AND OF BULL:  "The Sun Also Rises" was based on an actual trip that Hemingway made, and I have a book that analyzes that true-life experience, his first drafts and the final novel. While I recommend that for serious students of literature, those of a more frivolous bent will get more out of A.E. Hotchner's telling of going to bullfights with Hemingway for The Moth. It is one of the funniest stories I have ever heard, and I'd have linked it farther up, but then you'd have never made it here. Call it a reward for those who have!

Mike Peterson has posted his "Comic Strip of the Day" column every day since 2010. His opinions are his own, but we welcome comments either agreeing or in opposition.

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Comments 2

  1. There’s an ultimate test to see if you’re indispensable. Whenever you feel that you absolutely can’t be missed from a job or a responsibility, take a glass of water. Stick your finger in the water. Take the finger back up. If there’s a hole left where your finger was, you’re indispensable 😉

  2. I like the idea of being able to just get up and go somewhere. As of late, my life has felt a little too chained to my “stuff” in my house (as George Carlin, might say). As such, I’ve been doing my part to eliminate as much “stuff” from my collection as possible so that, one day, I can get up and go if need be without worrying too much about it.
    It’s a tough process, but every time I throw out a box o’ crap, I feel that much better about things.

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