I was a
college student majoring in Psychology when I first learned about Id.
Defined as the “evil” part of us that is driven by pure instinct, Id was characterized mainly by one
trait: A need for Instant Gratification.
I had taken
to calling it IG instead. IG gets angry and hits people. IG
sees something it likes and takes it. IG is a sociopath: a thief, a murderer, a rapist, a corrupt congressman.
What
supposedly separated Men from Animals was that we weren’t all about IG – that a man could have patience. To be fair to animals, they can be patient as
well – as those of us with dogs may have noticed. That puts IG
beneath animal behavior.
And yet
here we are, a world populated – even governed – by IGGY people I like to call IGIOTS.
If it isn’t
some jackass cutting to the front of a queue because he perceives his needs as
more important than everyone else’s, it’s some uncouth customer service rep constantly
checking the time in the middle of your conversation.
When I am
being Iggy I say things like “Hurry
up!” and “Let’s go already!” While I
don’t often say “Are we there yet,” I do go for the more creative “While we’re
young...?”
I chiefly blame technology for making me Iggy. The
need to come up with ways to do more in
less time has whittled my patience down to a point where anything less than
instant just takes too damn long.
MOBILE PHONES. The
usefulness has deteriorated into a crutch that hampers my ability to live in
the here and now. Phones make the world
smaller, so I can deliver my oh-so-important words straight into peoples’ ears
the moment I think of them.
That isn’t good
enough. Remember the rotary phones? Takes too long. I hated people with a zero on their digits. I also often wondered if I would be hacked to
death in my own home by an axe-wielding burglar because the emergency hotline
people were myopic and included a 9 in the number I had to dial.
To fix all that,
the touch tone was invented. And then
speed dialing. And then
voice-activation. I can now program my
phone so that all I have to do is grunt into it.
“Mmmh,” and
then my mother will pick up.
To me, the
worst use of my mobile phone is when I check on the whereabouts of somebody who
is already on the way to meet me. I can
be so Iggy that I don’t realize how constantly
checking on your updated arrival status does not make you go any faster. If anything it has the opposite effect.
HIGH SPEED INTERNET. I
used to be happy with dialup. (Can you imagine
dialup using a rotary phone?) I used to
doze off to the sweet sound of that electronic hee-haw.
These days,
if my Mac starts beachballing for more than five seconds, I will seriously
consider replacing it.
LouisCK’s
Super Secret Law of Lousy Internet Connections:
“Would you give it a second? It’s
going to space!”
I am now
the spoiled brat who fails to marvel at the wonder of this amazing magical
technology. Come on! If it takes a whole
minute for me to view a photograph of you from five thousand miles away, that’s
still a good deal!
WORK PRESSURE. Few
people can be as Iggy as the office boss. He who wants whatever it is he wants “right
now” – or even “yesterday.” Whether he
wants a report of last year’s toothpick usage, or his intern to hide under his
desk, this man exercises igiotic
behaviour “like a boss.”
This is not
strictly an office phenomenon either. Iggy school teachers have given me homework
that “will only take about an hour” and “is due tomorrow.” Does it matter that five other teachers gave me
the same speech? These teachers inspired
me to plagiarize.
I continue
to blame technology for creating the unreasonable expectations that make people
Iggy:
“They can put a man on the moon, surely you can photocopy three complete sets of Encyclopaedia Britannica
before my coffee gets
cold!”
MOTORIZED TRANSPORTATION. Walking
used to work, but it is now too much of a drag.
Not when I can get to go where I want to go sitting in a comfortable
chair that magically moves at least twice as fast. As fast as a trotting horse, if I am lucky.
But of
course, that is not good enough. So says
the Iggy driver honking at me because I moved the car a full second after the
light had turned green. Jesus Christ, a
full second!
My default response
to being honked at is to step on the brake.
The next impulse is to get out of the car so that I can walk over to the
honking Igiot and politely ask how I
can help him.
“Oh, I’m sorry, I thought you were honking at
me because you had something important to say.
I’ll just get back in my car now and we can… Oh dear me, the light has
changed, I guess we’re not going anywhere for at least another forty five
seconds. I do hope your office building
is still standing when you get there.”
Whether I
am in a queue, at a rendezvous, by the phone, or on the brink of an event that
will change my life forever, I’d like to believe that waiting ought to be embraced
as a pocket of time that provides me with an unexpected chance to be enriched –
even those 45 seconds waiting for the light to turn green. But technology and the promise of omnipresence
has gotten me to forget where I am. Hating
waiting is a result of my failure to recognize that I can choose to enjoy a situation.
Can I
really live a life where my recurring wish is for things to be over with?
Sounds Iggy to me.
1 comment:
published in The Philippine star Sept11, 2013 http://www.philstar.com/men/2013/09/11/1194431/getting-iggy-it
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