Those who don’t know history are doomed.
—from the trailer for HBO’s Life, Larry and the Pursuit
of Happiness: An Almost History of America (2026)
I see the trailer early this afternoon while I’m
frying up some vegetables and have put on a
pot of rice for lunch, all goodies from yesterday’s
trip to the weekly food pantry. Cooking takes up
a lot of precious time, and I find myself relaying
this often. Is it because I don’t like to cook, or
simply because I am lazy? No, I think the reason is I’d rather be doing other things, like checking
off “to do” list items, making important phone calls
(why are there so many of these, they seem to
propagate exponentially as time goes) (and does
it ever go!), reading, writing, posting new pieces
to my 21-year-old online daily project (this one!).
Anyway, there’s not much else to say about that
opening line except that it resonates too well. I’m
tired of being didactic, of feeling a need to preach or
teach (it’d mostly be to the converted, anyway, given
the tiny ways I go about such things) (activism—
will I ever resign myself to at least acknowledging
that it’s a responsibility I do take rather seriously,
and one within which I choose not to explicitly operate,
certainly not in any traditional sense, except perhaps,
again, in these lines, which, as noted earlier, is preaching
to the converted, I suppose). Did I quickly type it up just
to remind myself of this, to nudge myself into trying
new ways to make a difference? I suppose it is a bit
too obvious. In that deceptively profound way. But
it must not be obvious to everyone, if I am correct. It is
to the folks in that category I should send such a reminder?
But if I am right, how would I reach any for whome that notion
wouldn’t begin to register? Would convincing be possible? How
the nastiness of political division and—dare I say it?—sheer
and mandated ignorance have made it seem imperative
that even I do something, anything, if a single thing can
even be done about such a dilemma. Surely something can
be done, there must be many possibilities, but each avenue
I can imagine in which I’d make a difference (kindly and gently
doing my best to encourage without coming across as if I’m
proselytizing, as if I am preaching or teaching) would require
devoting my life to the cause. And how would I know that my
values are even the right ones? I decided long ago against such a
commitment to be a loudspeaker. And so the values I find imperative
and the history that makes each of them so lie at times within lines
that are likely to be never seen by any of the multitude of individuals
for whom such notions might assist. And so I keep doing as I do,
all the while pondering how important it is go further, to find
at least a balance between devotion to a cause or two and my
otherwise hedonistic or artistic or financial tendencies. So that
in the end have I taken down this little quote from a cute, perhaps
poignant new Larry David comdy coming out on television soon just
to verify that a cynic, a comedic celebrity, is doing more to make
the world a better place than I ever will (even if on HBO), to remind
me of my cowardice? No. It is something I already know. As I also
know that I’ve perhaps made a small difference, if indeed my
basic ideas of morality and a pretty full lifetime intent upon
educating myself and trying hard to maintain (what I determine
in my little head) how I should be in order that I might make a
difference and live a life I can be happy to have lived, doing my
part, which will really never be enough. It’s never enough. This
afternoon I shall attempt to own that. The hyperbolic corruption
and immorality of this era, this backwards movement away from
progress, this nightmarish regress, something I’d never known
until recently in my short life of mostly impatiently but sometimes
gleefully enjoying living in a land of three steps forward and two
steps back—followed by three solid steps forward—that this blessed
repetition has suddenly reversed course, seemingly ten-fold in speed.
I am a coward, it is true, and perhaps even moreso by saying it. If you
exist, you no doubt already know this. And for that I apologize, knowing
that act is but pouring fuel on the fire that is leading us back to the
Dark Ages, and I’m in goose-step with the masses, complicit in
our destruction. Nothing I can say could possibly justify it. And
yet I say it anyway. Unless, of course, this gives me (or perhaps
an imaginary you) the gumption to help put on the brakes in
an attempt to reverse course. About face! I can hardly walk, much
less turn 180 degrees, barely able to breathe. Enough excuses! I’m
old. Perhaps an adventure would help me recapture my motivation,
regain some energy. Who’s up for an adventure? Oh, but it’s time
for a nap. Here in the isolation booth, I decide to sit motionless. Is
that staying the course? Does it alter a destination? To lie in sleep and
dream with satisfaction that to do nothing is a ‘step’ in the right direction.