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Black and white

Black and white

yinyangcandleWhen I was young the life was black and white. There was only wrong or right. There was one truth, and that was absolute. Heroes and villains. And you chose. That was all there was to it.

In my mind I was the hero. Oh, the volumes I could write about the gleaming sword, the shining armour, the white faithful steed and the rest of the accoutrements that I put on every morning… In my head, you see, I wasn’t taking the bus to school, I was riding for justice. And learning. Six hours a day, except for sports class, which didn’t really count, but it was fun nevertheless. After all, heroes are allowed to have fun, aren’t they?

One side-effect of being a hero is that you tend to be very judgemental toward people. The process is quite simple – it begins with “If I was in their place…”, then sword! armour! shield! ride to save the day!, and it ends invariably with a look halfway between pity and disgust towards the unsavoury compromises chosen by said person. Chosen in place of the “full speed ahead and damn the torpedoes” approach that you envision yourself doing. It is the privilege and pleasure of young people everywhere to save the day, sometimes even more than once, be the hero and maybe get the girl. In their heads.

Of course, as we get older, things get much more… gray, shall we say. You make mistakes of your own, ones which you cannot readily justify and absorb inside your hero persona. You make compromises. You live with them. And you begin to understand the world a little better.

Because, you see, when the hero slays the dragon, he gets to ride off into the sunset and out of the story, sometimes accompanied by the girl of his dreams. And we never find out how it really turns up. Like, for instance, when he realises that the dragons were an intelligent species that could have lived quietly alongside humans, enriching both our lives and theirs, only they never got the chance, because the hero killed them all. Or that time when the princess, sick and tired of his heroing around instead of helping take care of the kids, goes back to her mother and takes said children with her. Or when he hung up his sword, promising never to use it again, only for his children to hate him for it – because there’s this ogre, you see, and he could easily have taken care of it, but he promised his wife he’d never… And so it goes.

So next time you’re in a rush to judge somebody, allow at least a tiny little doubt in your mind, saying you might be wrong. Saying you might have done the same, had you been in their place. It is quite easy, being the hero.Much harder, being human.

Getting a cold…

Getting a cold…

cold.jpg

… sucks. Seriously. As if you didn’t know.

When I was a kid, I used to get a serious cold once a year. And I don’t mean just a fever and a stuffed nose either. I’m talking getting so hot you start shaking, inflamed ganglions and injectable Penicilin until you can’t sit up straight – that kind of cold. It got to be so bad at one point that my parents seriously considered having yours truly go through a tonsillectomy. They have thankfully decided against it.

On the flipside, when I turned 18 I magically became impervious to this particular disease. Sure, I’d get the sniffles sometimes in the winter, or wake up with a headache and a mild fever every now and then, but never much worse than that, and then only for a couple of days at the most. I could walk a few miles in the snow and then eat an ice cream with a snowball chaser and I’d be just fine. At one point it started getting ridiculous. I remember, for instance, an episode of walking about 5 kilometres in the rain, bare-chested – shirt was already soaked, so there was no point in keeping it on, was there? – then having a hot tea and suffering no consequences whatsoever. Or having a swim in the Black Sea on the 1st of May – the water was about 10 degrees Celsius (or 50 Fahrenheit, for the folks across the pond) – again, no consequences worth mentioning. I was 20 an the time and yes damnit, it was a dare, and there was a girl involved.

Ahem. Anyway. Seeing that I was starting to become way too cocky about this apparent iron health of mine, Santa decided that I deserved something really special this year: a viral bronchitis with high fever, racking coughs, headaches and a general state of deep unhappiness about the world in general and my big, fat, blabbering mouth in particular. The later being guilty for tempting fate no earlier than the beginning of December last year, when a meteoric episode of the flu got most of my colleagues, while skipping me for some reason – which at the time seemed normal, and now just pure blind luck. So I’ve managed to spend Christmas and New Year on a diet of Paracetamol, hot tea and Strepsils, going through about a cubic meter of Kleenex and generally feeling sorry for myself.

The highlight of that hellish week though was the conversation I had with my doctor. Please note that my voice was gone at the time – I was at that particular stage of the disease known by the connoisseurs as the “Leonard Cohen”. It went somewhat like this:

Me (in a deep, ragged voice): “Doc, I think I got bronchitis.”

Him: “Yes, I think you got a flu virus, it’s been a bit of an epidemic lately. I recommend you take some Paracetamol, drink lots of tea with lemon and honey and stay in bed. If you do that, you’ll get rid of it in about one week.”

Me: “Can’t I do anything to make it go away faster?”

Him: “Not really. In fact, if you do absolutely nothing, it will still go away in about one week. Paracetamol makes it more bearable.”

Which brings me, rather forcefully, to my point: here we are, XXIst century and all, up to our teeth in high-tech, space age and all that… and still out cold whenever a puny virus feels like having a go at our respiratory system – and yes, the pun was intended. We haven’t eradicated the common cold – in fact, we’re not even close – and the best our doctors can offer is just one step above the willow bark they were prescribing three thousand years ago. There are reasons for this, one being that this particular virus mutates like crazy1. So there’s no easy way to target it with an antiviral drug. The best we can do is shooting up a neutered version of it and hoping that our bodies generate antibodies that are effective against the strain “du jour”.

So if you got the flu this season, my heart goes out to you. Drink your tea with lemon and honey – vitamin C is good for the immune system, and your throat also can use some relief -, take your Paracetamol and weather it out. And although technology didn’t help with the remedy, it will at least keep you entertained.

After all, those Middle Ages willow bark eaters never had an Internet connection.

  1. In fact, a particularly nasty variation of it, known as “the Spanish flu” killed a few million back in the 1920’s. []

2009 is round the corner…

2009 is round the corner…

happy new year

It’s been an… interesting year, 2008. With joys and losses, highs and lows… But aren’t they all?

Here’s wishing you a New Year filled with happy days, with many joys and few regrets. Let there be answers for your questions, friends for your company and beauty for your eyes. May you know love and peace and happiness, good health, good wine, good music and interesting conversations.

Cheers!