Etch-A-Sketches, And Shaking Them Hard

Wed, Jan 28, 2009 by Charlie Pratt

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I always wondered whether or not shaking my Etch-A-Sketch hard had anything to do with the quickness of its ability to erase whatever geometric nightmare I’d twisted onto its grayscale screen. I always went into the affair with visions of Frank Lloyd Wright, but always seemed to end up with a London Underground Map. Magnetics are always interesting at any age, but even more so when confined in single, slender line and given up-down, left-right machinations by two giant white knobs. The rounded red casing grabs the eye and tells you that the science experiment going on beneath your fingertips is not only educational, but quite a diversion as well.

A lot of jobs went down the drain this week. Poof. Like the Statue of Liberty under Copperfield’s watch or tact under O’Reilly’s. The tendency, in moments like these, is to blame a side: Republicans, Democrats, the Senate, the House, the President, etc. Whoever seems most to blame, we’ll turn our bright television lights on them and watch their skin sizzle. We the public (or, “the people” as the Constitution claims) are not nearly as interested in the minutiae, but rather the results. And so help us, if the results aren’t what we prefer, then, well, let’s crucify somebody. No better salve for disappointment than a crucifixion, I always say.

Five hundred, twenty-four thousand jobs. That’s more than seven times the capacity of Raymond James Stadium, site of Super Bowl XLIII in Tampa, Florida. Take a moment to consider it when you’re watching the Boss try to convince you that he’s a “Nothing Man” in front of nearly 80,000 people. Multiply the audience by seven and imagine them in your living room, all looking at you, frowning and forlorn, waiting for Monster or Career Builder to offer something just a bit tastier than the saltless fare they offer up on a daily basis.

The job market has been zapped, not unlike the time I electrocuted myself after deciding to sever the wire on my tree lamp during my third year of college. In a misguided attempt to turn it into a bed-mounted bunk-lamp, I forgot to unplug the thing before hacking into it with a stainless steel Leatherman. Zap-zap-ze-bap, I couldn’t feel my left side.

I like to picture God, or something similar, reaching down to the District and picking up the Fed, and with a desperate determination usually reserved for ninth inning relief pitching or fourth quarter post-patterns, shaking the hell out of the thing, right there in front of Congress and everybody. Junior senators and staff assistants stand on the Capitol steps, wide-eyed and slack-jawed, watching the pillars of our financial freedom get shaken to bits right in front of their eyes. Financial wizards tumble out like non-survivors from the Titanic, bellowing and screaming while spinning like propellers towards the grass on Virginia Avenue, wishing they’d taken that job at Merrill Lynch IKEA and praying for a communist Maker on the other side.

To those who’ve gotten canned, laid off, supplanted, relocated, and to the thousands more who now sweat, puckered up tight, while tiptoeing through the daily grind in the cubicle farms of multi-national corporations with fat fingers on the HR trigger:

Welcome, I say, to life. A forest is not a majestic forest until it’s been ravaged a few hundred times by fire and carried on. American security isn’t what we thought, it’s just an illusion, like the Statue of Liberty trick and most of what happens on CNN.

Let’s band together and make something new.

4 Comments to “Etch-A-Sketches, And Shaking Them Hard”


  1. KimberlyDi Says:

    While going through my blog list of favorites, trimming away the unworthy (or just unfrequest posters like myself), you’ve survived the chopping block today. You stay on my favorites.

    What has gone wrong with this world? Who to blame but ourselves? A great deal of this was started by our lifestyles. Buying on credit. Buying more than we could afford. Squeezing the equity out of our homes to buy SUV’s or go on vacation. Families forgetting how to cook only to go out to eat all the time. Then the housing bubbles in California, Arizona and Florida. Getting loans where you knew you couldn’t afford the ARM that would kick in a few years down the road. A foolish belief that you would be able to sell it before then making a fat profit at the same time. It was insanity.

    My husband and I have greatly scaled back our lifestyle. And when everyone does that, it does hurt the economy. That gangbuster economy was fueled by fiscal irresponsibility.

  2. Vicky Says:

    Five years ago we left “Corporate America.” It was a quest to stop enslaving ourselves to the concepts of more, and more=better. We traded the Suburban for the Prius, the Starbucks for the kitchen-counter coffee grinder, the plastic for the green. At one time, my diamond wedding band was laid on the table. It was far easier than I imagined. When you let go of the attachment to “stuff” and consciously choose how you want to live it becomes very freeing. I feel far wealthier now, and have much more abundance than I could have dreamed of. When the house of cards at the foundation of the economy began to crumble, I couldn’t help but feel the smallest sense of relief. Hope will rise from the ruins.

  3. Erin Prais-Hintz Says:

    I have to remember that no matter how much I might dislike what my job is, it is a job. And I am a fortunate one. It may not be my dream (and I do have one). My dream will just take a bit longer to materialize. I do realize that we are all in this together. That we all need to shoulder some responsibility and stop laying blame. Let’s work together and show the world that we do not come to a standstill. We may well be the wide base of the problem worldwide, but I am quite certain that if the world will be fixed that we will be the leaders in that as well.

    Thank you Charlie for such an intelligent post. I love the way you take something that is seemingly incongruous – the Etch A Sketch – to serve as an image for your theme. You keep me coming back here for more.

  4. Jenners Says:

    You are such a gifted writer … I thought I would be reading about your nostalgia for a childhood toy and then your tricked me into having deep thoughts.


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