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Replying to a comment on:
Jeeves Garcia (Prose Poem) by Crakyamuni
My Dinner with Andre: A fictional conversation
By Nobody
Wally and a man had been delving into very compelling topics of
conversation during that evening at the restaurant, and from a
philosophical standpoint, very dark topics. This dinner conversation
was not light hearted and was filled with many deep issues that had been
troubling Wally, that was evident. Iâve been a waiter at this
restaurant for nine years now, nine long years. To be honest Iâve
always thought Wally to be a little unsettling. Though he is a seemingly
kind man, he always seems distant.
Wally had mentioned some sort of social experiment, involving a hundred
people in a room. What was particular about this experiment was that
there was no premise for the experiment! A hundred people in a room
doing nothing. From what I understood, this was a practice of
objectivity. I decided to ask the busboy Jeevs Garcia his take on this
exercise in objectivity. Waiter: Hey Jeevs, could you think of a good
reason to invite one hundred people into a large room, I mean besides to
get drunk? Jeevs: What the hell are you getting at? Iâm creative man,
youâre talking about some sort of performance art or some shit huh?
Waiter: I guess, but still more objective; I mean there isnât a
pressure to perform, no tools, no food or drink, just people. Jeevs: Iâ
d start by charging everyone five dollars just to get in; I mean thatâ
s a quick five hundred! Yeah, so even if the art sucked, at least Iâ
d make a few dollars. Waiter: Thatâs beside the point, imagine for a
second that you have no motives to even imagine, no desires, no gains;
Then what, what would you make of this room? Jeevs: Iâd be
uncomfortable. I mean a hundred people just standing around doing
nothing seems dangerous for some reason. Waiter: What if some of these
people just started to cry, or sing, or dance for no reason, just
because? Jeevs: Iâm not sure man, I mean I could accept it because in
that sort of situation there are no guidelines to the way you act or
react towards the environment. You observe or participate, choose to
fear or celebrate. Itâs like my cousin, he always gets invited to the
best parties but when he gets there heâs too uncomfortable in his own
skin to dance or socialize, heâs a complete freak. I mean we are all
given the opportunities to participate in life, but itâs never so
critical that it changes us. Waiter: In a sense I think that is what
Wally was trying to organize with this experiment, an opportunity for
the participants to see themselves in a very different light, as fragile,
strong, neurotic, passionate, anything. When people force themselves
to react in situations that they have never been in, they learn the most
about themselves, about the possibilities that exist within the person;
the fear that exudes from such a situation is the fear of the unknown,
and knowledge eliminates that fear. If the same hundred were put into
the same room for a second time, their reactions would be very different.
The raw reactions would be replaced by familiar reactions based on the
mutual experience of the past room experiment, the comfort level would
be altered, and personal inventories about individuals would be utilized.
I really think Wally was onto something great.
Jeevs: Whatever man, I still think the idea gives me the creeps. I
like knowing what the hellâs going on around me anyways! People get
all caught up in trying to free their minds from the daily grind, just
like all the junkies that make this city turn. Everyone wants to find a
way out of their lives, through meditation or the pipe, or stupid ass
performance art; all they need is to be happy with the life they have,
and to just keep living. Thatâs what I think. Waiter: In a way your
right Jeevs, our lives are never as bad as we think, but I guess we all
want more. Let me ask you, do you want to bus tables forever? Jeeves:
Are you crazy man?! Hell no, this is just for now, I got plans. Waiter:
But you come here six nights a week, to this restaurant, for the last
two years, without fail? This restaurant is essentially a big room,
with up to seventy five people in it at any given time, not unlike Wallyâ
s experiment. Our comfortable immediate surroundings have become our
world, our small robotic existence. Jeeves: Youâre freaking me out
man.
Waiter: Iâm quitting this job tomorrow.
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