John, calling parents: “Busy signal?!”
Me (mock horror): “What is THAT?”
John: “I know – where do they live, anyway?”
Me: “1985.”
"That's not writing - that's typing." --Truman Capote
John, calling parents: “Busy signal?!”
Me (mock horror): “What is THAT?”
John: “I know – where do they live, anyway?”
Me: “1985.”
I’m plowing my way through the first in the series of George R.R. Martin’s epic potboilers, A Game of Thrones. Â Finally. Â Well, I’m finally successfully doing so. Â And good grief, but it as actually brought me to a personal epiphany.
I have tried before to read this book and failed miserably. Â But John really likes it, and I value his opinion, so I kept trying. Â Also, HBO is putting together a series based on the books and it looks really, really good. Â Getting it on the Kindle helped (700-page epic doorstop novels are high on my list of things that give equal on the plus and minus sides in entertainment value and repetitive stress injuries). Â But for someone like me, this book was sort of like signing up for voluntary sandpapering of second-degree burns or giving Joss Whedon the license to direct the activities of your nearest and dearest for the next few months. Â I felt like a petty god was sitting somewhere and saying, “Oh – wait: you like this character? Â DEAD,” over and over and over again.
Why so sensitive, Jill? Â I don’t know – but I know that I was the person who couldn’t fathom being a divorce attorney because I knew I couldn’t tread the fine line between the empathy required to advocate passionately for my clients and the necessary detachment from their plights to enable strategic thinking. Â My emotional balance is wonky that way, even when I read a book. Â I read a news report a while ago that talked about people who actually feel pain when they see someone else receive injury – the pain areas in the brain of the person doing the viewing actually light up. Â I am pretty sure I am one of those people, and the more I empathize with the person in question, the worse it gets.
This even happens when I read.  Yeah, yeah, yeah – I was one of those kids whose parents said the house would burn around my ears while I read.  About ten years ago I finished The Golden Compass on a Southwest flight in a seat that faced a fellow passenger (a stranger).  When I finished the book and slowly returned to reality this person commented, “I didn’t think you were coming out of that.”  The more I do that deep dive, the more I empathize with death, injury, or loss suffered by the characters I like.  Considering the shelf footage this series takes up, I knew I didn’t have the emotional bandwidth to go through that much bloodshed with my nerves exposed.
So, at long last, I realized that I couldn’t read the book with my usual 100% investment. Â I had to view it somewhat dispassionately. Â Don’t get attached – everyone’s going to die and probably horribly. Â When I made that decision, the pages started ripping by. Â And I like the book – I really do. Â But I can’t love it the way I have loved other books that were also intricately constructed, intelligent, and well-written.
Here’s the disturbing epiphany. Â I have been doing the same thing in life with a lot of 2010. Â Not in my personal life, but in my reaction to the constant barrage of bad news. Â At some point I flipped from the empathetic to the dispassionate to save my nerves. Â And somehow I need to try again to sort out a way to walk that fine line. Â Because being dispassionate is not the way I want to face the world. Â At least, not entirely.
Edit: here’s my real incentive (to read the books, not to step back from the brink of being a completely dispassionate person-analog) – an HBO series with actors like Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and Peter Dinklage? Yes, please.
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