One
of my favorite scenes
in a musical comedy
appears in The Music Man. The scene comes near the end of the
show when the flimflamming traveling salesmen, Professor Harold Hill,
is confronted by the townspeople of River City, Iowa to make good on
his promise to deliver a boys marching band. For days Hill has evaded
questions about his musical credentials, saying only that he uses something
called the Think System of teaching music. Now, under threat
of being tarred and feathered and run out of town, the professor faces
his moment of reckoning.
While everyone is assembled
in the high school auditorium to pass judgment on the handcuffed Professor
Hill, in comes the town's boys with their shiny new instruments and
spiffy uniforms. On their own, we learn, they've been practicing The
Think System. With no other recourse, Professor Hill is forced to conduct
the band right there on the spot and prove that his system works.
The boys take up their instruments.
The Professor nervously takes up his baton. Eyes roll and breaths are
held.
Now think, men. Think!,
he implores.
Straining every corpuscle
in their tone-deaf craniums, the boys attempt to play a few notes of
"Minuet in G." The result is mostly noise. The Professor appears
doomed.
But wait! Somewhere in the
cacophony a tune begins to emerge. It gets stronger as the boys think
harder and harder. Like spontaneous combustion, the minuet bursts forth
in a blazing validation of The Think System and the River City Boys
Band is born. Roll over, Beethoven. It's a miracle.
A journalist once asked the
famous missionary and physician Dr. Albert Schweitzer what he thought
the main problem was with most people. His answer was," They don't
think."
OK, I'm not positive that
conversation took place. And if it did, I'm not even sure if it was
Albert Schweitzer. It may have been Albert Einstein. Or Marv Albert.
But my point is that most people just don't have the mental gumption
of the River City Boys Band. Thinking is something we turn to as a last
resort.
And yet another great mind,
George Bernard Shaw, when asked the secret of his success, replied that
he just forced himself to think real hard for several minutes every
day. By doing that, he claimed, he was able to achieve far more than
the average person and he didn't have to toil nearly as long.
As Shaw understood, thinking
is no doubt the hardest thing one ever has to do. Nothing in this world,
after all, existed before someone thought of it. Thought is the creator
of everything, not just the River City Boys Band. Some theologians even
suggest that Infinite Thought created the universe. So we're dealing
with a pretty heady force here.
Since thought is so powerful
I'm wondering today why more people don't engage in it. If as a society
we collectively really thought for one minute a day about the issues
that confront us, why couldn't we solve some of the world's problems?
OK, perhaps eliminating world hunger and war will require a more sound
method than The Think System, but at least it would be a start. So why
don't we try it?
The problem is, society as
a rule does not reward thinking. We live in a dumbed-down world. From
diarrhea-mouthed talk-television to books that serve up chicken bouillon
for the soul and movable feasts of cheese, nothing much is expected
of us. There is always someone who is ready and eager do our thinking
for us, whether it's the boss, the church, CNN or Madison Avenue. Everything
from what to eat to what to wear is nicely catalogued, indexed and hyped.
We've been conditioned to believe that choosing between the café
latte and the cappuccino is a momentous decision. For many folks, thinking
is the brain sprain that results from picking one from column A and
one from column B.
Thinking is left by most
for the smart people to do. And that's where we get it wrong.
There is a big difference, in my opinion, between being smart and being
able to think. If you don't believe me, just tune into one of the more
intelligent television quiz shows like Jeopardy!
or Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? Here you will find lots of
smart people.
But can they think? What
earthly difference does it make if someone knows, for example, that
Mark Twain's real name was Samuel Clemens or that he grew up in Hannibal,
Missouri? Most of those smart contestants never even read Tom Sawyer,
let alone Life on the Mississippi. With rare exceptions, you
just know they have no personal experience of the data stored in their
heads. They are reacting to cerebral stimuli, the same as my dog reacts
(sometimes) to a command to sit.
What's the point of knowing
something if you have no knowledge of it? Well, the scam is that if
someone holds in his possession loads of information, he will probably
convince you that he's a well-rounded and incredibly interesting person.
You might even infer that he's been to all the places and experienced
all the things he knows all about. At the very least you'll assume he's
read and studied about them enough to be an expert. And the rest of
us dumb schmucks should be impressed. I gotta tell ya, at least my Manhattan
mutt has walked the streets of Hannibal. I'm more impressed by that.
Yes, thinking is a miracle.
It's a miracle because it rarely happens. What we have instead is an
assortment of pseudo-thinking systems. Pseudo Think is often fantastically
impressive, especially in its less evolved forms where a lot of activityeither
physical or mentalis exerted. You see, there is a hierarchy of
pseudo thinking, much like there is in the martial arts. One starts
out as a white beltall grunts and strains in an attempt to master
the basics. Eventually, if you don't give up, you become a black belt
pseudo-thinker and command the respect of all.
White belt pseudo-thinkers
usually begin with Insanity Thinking, also known as The
Little Engine that Could Thinking. This is a favorite of mine
because it is so comfortable in its application. You just keep trying
and trying and tryingI think I can, I think I can, I think
I can. You don't have to do anything different than you did the
last time. You're always late to work? No problem. Just keep rushing
around at top speed every morning and eventually you'll get there on
time. Don't ever consider getting up fifteen minutes earlier. Insanity
Thinking is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a
different result.
Next is Trial and Error
Thinking. I also like to refer to this as, Houston, We've
Got a Problem Thinking because something usually needs to be fixed.
It may not be broken, but it still needs to be fixed. This marks a step
up in the neurological workout ladder becausejust the opposite
of Insanity Thinkingit requires you to actually do something different.
Many, many, many times.
For example, if your car
stalls, first open the hood and look at the motor. Then close the hood
and see if it will now start. If it still won't start, try opening the
hood again while a friend attempts to start the engine. If that doesn't
work, change places with your friend. As you can readily see, this process
can be carried on indefinitely. The point is to avoid analyzing the
problem. Just because you tried to drive from Kansas City to Boston
on one tank of gas is no reason to check the fuel gauge.
Another pseudo think system
belongs to a self-described esoteric group of people who practice Meditative
Thinking, or When the Spirit Moves Me Thinking. Actually,
this type of thinking goes back millennia and has gotten a bad rap in
recent decades. Originally this was the sole domain of sages and other
enlightened men and women. These people drew upon inspiration or divine
interference for their wisdom. All they had to do was climb to the top
of a mountain or sit quietly in a cave for a few years.
These thinkers became known
as some of the greatest minds in history. And for centuries their techniques
were improved upon by Johnny-come-lately scientists and inventors like
Isaac Newton and Henry Ford. These new boys discovered they could achieve
the same results by just sitting under a tree and waiting for an apple
to fall on their head or by watching slaughtered cattle roll by in a
meat packing plant. Unfortunately, today's meditative thinkerwanting
for time and patiencethinks he can do the same thing. The problem
is, he does it while on the toilet with a copy of The Wall Street
Journal.
And then there is Mind
Reading ThinkingMRT. This type of thinking has been perpetuated
by self-proclaimed gurus who sell everything from books on interpreting
body language to Neuro-linguistic Programming courses. The whole point
of MRT is to get ahead in life by reading the minds of everyone from
your boss to the cutie in the next cubicle. Forget about actually engaging
someone in a conversation to learn more about how he thinks or feels.
Interpersonal communication is anathema to Mind Reading Thinking.
Multiple Choice Thinkingor
"Game Show" Thinkingrelies solely upon the thinker having
accumulated a bunch of facts about a particular subject or subjects.
Like Imelda Marcos' shoes, most of them will never get to be used. But
then, you just never know when one of those little nuggets of information
might come in handy. And what a hit it makes if you do finally get a
chance to trot one out.
The modus operandi of Multiple
Choice Thinkers is to solve a problem based on a set of pre-defined
answer parameters. Hence, the more answers you have in your
arsenal, the more likely you are to have one that fits the puzzle. Like
contestants on the old TV game show, Family Feud, the object
is to reach into your bag of knowledge and come up with a good
answer.
The problem is, life's not
a game of Trivial Pursuit. Multiple ChoiceThinking still limits you
to only the possibilities being presented. Just because you're the boss,
for example, and you have legions of fact finders at your disposal doesn't
mean you're always getting the RIGHT facts. Get it? Bzzzz! Thank you
for playing.
Nothing New Under the
Sun Thinking. You may also hear this referred to as "Reincarnation"
Thinking, "Renovation" Thinking or "Steal Shamelessly"
Thinking. The object here is to take an idea that has proven itself
successful in the past. Then copy itadding a new wrinkle or twoand
bring it out again as an original idea. If you are careful enough in
disguising the original source some people might even think you're a
friggin' genius.
You observe this kind of
thinking all the time in the business world. Take the fashion industry,
for example. One guy comes out with an original design that sells for
thousands of dollars and the next thing you know the same
dress is in every K-Mart across the country. Or what about the movies?
Hell, now there's an industry where they don't even bother to steal
from their competition. Why should they when they can steal from themselves?
If you're in the movie industry and you have a successful film all you
have to do is change it twenty percent and stick a II, III or a MCXVII
after the title and you're back in business.
But my favorite Nothing New
Under the Sun thinkers can be found on the shelves of the business and
self-improvement sections of your local bookstore. Here you will encounter
the thinking of those who have virtually nothing new to say. Have you
noticed that? Just take a look next time you're in Barnes & Noble.
Pick up almost any one of those books and if you're over 28 years old
you've heard it all beforemany, many times. Granted, one guy may
say it better than another and his book may be easier to read or more
useful. But we're talking about quality of thinking here. I don't know
about you, but I stopped paying $25 for books that only deliver $4.75
worth of new thoughts years ago. Stick with quality fiction. You'll
learn more.
Let Someone Else Figure
It Out Thinking. Now we've almost come full circle. You're almost
a black belt. You gotta love it! This person practices "No Thinking
at All" Thinking. He's just totally above it all. He's a very busy
man, after all. So busy that he's never in one place for more than a
few minutes at a time. Therefore he's a great delegator. Always on the
phone or dashing from one meeting to another, he is propped up by legions
of proxy thinkersspeech writers, policy makers, PR handlers, lawyers,
consultants, and, of course, his executive asssistant.
How can he possibly have
time to do something as mundane as think? He's too busy running the
goddam company (or country) for chrissake. But one thing you can count
on. He'll take all the credit for any thinking you do.
As you can see, the old EEG
needle gets pushed to the limit in even the most mindless form of pseudo
think. And that's just the problem. Thinking is not a function of the
brain. It's a function of the mind. Using your brain is no more related
to thinking than using your hands or your back. When's the last time
you ever heard of someone being hired because of his mind? No, we are
hired because we are smart. We're intelligent. Companies want people
with brains. They want people who can brainSTORM. If they can't, they
are considered brain-DEAD.
Sure, brains get things done.
Brains beget activity. But what are we working so hard at? People with
brains often make mindless things happen. People with minds, on the
other hand, are frequently considered trouble makers. They rock the
boat. They have silly and dangerous ideas. They think outside
the box, which is to say they think at all.
It's no secret that many,
if not most, of the great thinkers throughout history have paid dearly
for their thoughts. But inevitably they are proven correct. The world
is not flat. The sun does not circle the earth. The race is not to the
swift.
Think about that.
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