My daily commute to our office runs along a collection of Indianapolis city streets taking me from the suburban to the urban. The drive normally lasts about 30 minutes and runs through charming and not so charming parts of our fair city. Where interstate travel is a blur of cars, road structures, billboards, trees, houses, and buildings, driving through the city is stop and go, affording one many up close and personal glimpses of humanity, existing in its many varieties. Charming and not so charming.
The last couple of miles of my daily drive moves through narrow streets, closely edged by sidewalks amid old neighborhoods. Stopped recently in a line of cars along one of these streets, I noticed two men walking on the sidewalk on both sides of the street. The slowness of their shuffling and the curious positioning of both at about the same point on opposite sides of hte street caught my attention. Both were dressed in ragged clothing, dirty and disheveled, and moved with their shoulders hunched. They were walking toward my position but the direction seemed random, unintentional…the sidewalk moved them along but they didn’t seem to be going anywhere.
As they came close, I could see their faces more clearly. Though they looked at the ground, I could see the blank, listless look in their eyes – it was a vacant stare toward nothing in particular and I was struck by the depth of its emptiness. I wondered about them, where they had come from, where they were going, why they were here. I assumed they were on drugs and homeless, likely pushed out of the previous night’s accommodations by someone like me who didn’t want them on the front porch of their business or school or park. My assessment might not have been fair or just, but it was a relatively educated guess.
As I watched them move toward, beside, and then past me, Billy Idol’s haunting1983 song, The Dead Next Door, came to mind:
Watch the sky
For a reason why
I’m safe here
Sunday it was part
Monday it was none
Monday was none
For the dead next door
One pair of silent terror reins
And we’re the dead next door
The heat of the day fades away
Fades into the night
The heat of the day
Offering a wedding
Suffering away
For the dead next door
You see
One error, silent terror
And we’re the dead next door
The few feet between myself and those two men ambling by seemed a gulf of inestimable distance, and yet, they may have once driven along that same road looking at two other human beings wondering the same things I was wondering. What brings a person to such a place of lifelessness?
Yesterday, I had the opportunity to attend a men’s retreat. One of the topics that came up focused on the idols of our lives. Oh yes, we all have them. Everyone worships something. Everyone gives their heart and energy to something. One of the great challenges of our human existence is the propensity for the good things of this world to become bad in our single minded pursuit of them. The right ordering of our desires is a constant struggle. As I write this post, an ad for online poker and the promise of smoke-free gambling in the comfort of my own home comes on, offering one more opportunity to distract and entertain myself to whatever extent I desire.
Follow your time and money, there you will find what you worship. The idols of our lives rarely look like calves, but they are often quite golden.
Later, driving in the pristine comfort of my own neighborhood, I crossed a beautifully paved trail full of bikers, runners, and walker. These suburbanites were clean and properly attired in the latest in athleisure-wear from Lululemon and Vuori, moving with purpose. No shuffling directionlessness here. Stopping at a crosswalk, I noticed a man pushing a stroller holding a little girl. She was about 2 years old and he was a young, fit dad, taking an opportunity to have some special one-on-one time with his little girl. He passed in front of me, one hand on the stroller and the other holding the smartphone into which he was staring.
Frowning, I thought to myself, what are you doing? Then I noticed that he seemed familiar to me. Pausing for a moment, I realized that it wasn’t him that I recognized, but I did recognize the vacant, distant look in his eyes. He wasn’t in that moment, he was far away, distracted from the life happening all around him. He was traveling through scores, or email, or instragams, or stock quotes, or headlines. His head was pointed downward and, though his shoulders were only slightly hunched, I saw the reorientation of vision from what’s ahead and around to the slouching gaze of what’s in that little device.
Looking around, I saw it everywhere. People walking or riding with their phones out. Some were looking at their phone or talking on it, while walking with another person, others were ambling along by themselves, oblivious to the world as they stared at the screen. Many bikers had their phones bracketed on their handlebars. I thought to myself: we no longer need a chemical to numb ourselves.
Billy came back to my mind:
In animal land
And dark is in command
One thing you should know
Don’t hear that knocking
Don’t eat out of their hand
Don’t stumble, die
You say
Don’t stumble, cry
They see you and me
You and me
With the dead next door
Listening to a young man describe the irresistible pull of his phone and I thought of the lifeless utility of immediate gratification that comes with such an always on, infinitely available resource. I noticed the difficulty he had with casual conversation, the awkward, halting sentences and expressionless reaction to questions and humor. He wasn’t humorless or lifeless, but he struggled to interact…and he recognized the struggle. His was a struggle with human connection. “It’s just easier to go to the phone.”
We’ve all taken a bit of the Apple and this is the great drug of our time. The numbness and distraction that come with it threaten to make each of us the dead next door. We carry our idols in our pockets and they are no longer sacramentals like a Rosary or a Cross. They talk and listen and entertain and promise…more. Always more. The great utility of our time is making each of us utilitarian and the numbing expectation of everything all the time is turning our eyes more and more inward. Not toward the depths of our soul, but toward the depths of our desires. All the way to the bottom.
Reconsidering his song, I wonder if Billy might rework the last line:
They see you and me
You and me
Now, we’re the dead next door
Looking down at my keyboard, I see my phone laying there. Easy, accessible. Calling. Always calling. Aristotle challenged us to aim for the Golden Mean – the prudent middle of the extremes that persistently pinball us through our days. The things of this world call and our great struggle is to rightly order them with the desires that drive us. To be fully alive is to empty ourselves in love for the other. All else is trying to fill a hole that will never be filled with the things of this world.