If you have
ever gone through a toll booth, you know that your relationship to the person
in the booth is not the most intimate you'll ever have. It is one of life's
frequent non-encounters: You hand over some money; you might get change; you
drive off. I have been through every one of the 17 toll booths on the Oakland-San Francisco Bay
Bridge on thousands of
occasions, and never had an exchange worth remembering with anybody.
Late one
morning in 1984, headed for lunch in San
Francisco , I drove toward one of the booths. I heard
loud music. It sounded like a party, or a Michael Jackson concert. I looked
around. No other cars with their windows open. No sound trucks. I looked at the
toll booth. Inside it, the man was dancing.
"What
are you doing?" I asked. "I'm having a party," he said.
"What about the rest of these people?" I looked over at other booths;
nothing moving there. "They're not invited."
I had a
dozen other questions for him, but somebody in a big hurry to get somewhere
started punching his horn behind me and I drove off. But I made a note to
myself: Find this guy again. There's something in his eye that says there's
magic in his toll booth. Months later I did find him again, still with the loud
music, still having a party.
Again I
asked, "What are you doing?" He said, "I remember you from the
last time. I'm still dancing. I'm having the same party." I said,
"Look. What about the rest of the people." He said. "Stop. What
do those look like to you?" He pointed down the row of toll booths.
"They look like toll booths." "Noooo imagination!"
I said,
"Okay, I give up. What do they look like to you?" He said,
"Vertical coffins." "What are you talking about?"
"I can
prove it. At 8:30 every morning, live people get in. Then they die for eight
hours. At 4:30, like Lazarus from the dead, they reemerge and go home. For
eight hours, brain is on hold, dead on the job. Going through the
motions."
I was
amazed. This guy had developed a philosophy, a mythology about his job. I could
not help asking the next question: "Why is it different for you? You're
having a good time."
He looked at
me. "I knew you were going to ask that," he said. "I'm going to
be a dancer someday." He pointed to the administration building. "My
bosses are in there, and they're paying for my training."
Sixteen
people dead on the job, and the seventeenth, in precisely the same situation,
figures out a way to live. That man was having a party where you and I would
probably not last three days. The boredom! He and I did have lunch later, and
he said, "I don't understand why anybody would think my job is boring. I
have a corner office, glass on all sides. I can see the Golden Gate, San Francisco , the Berkeley
hills; half the Western world vacations here and I just stroll in every day and
practice dancing.
Abraham
Lincoln said, "Most people are about as happy as they make up their minds
to be." I would tend to agree.
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