08 Mar 2008 12:27:47 | David Leonhardt
Just when you thought you had all the fun you could possibly
handle with Saddam Hussein, North Korea, Al Quaeda and the
winter that just won't die, along comes SARS – severe-acute
respiratory syndrome.
I recently fielded a call on this subject from one of my biggest
fans: "You moron. What do you mean we can fight SARS with our
heads? Can't you see? We are all going to die. Die. Die, I tell
you."
"Please, mother. Don't panic. Panicking will only make it worse."
"What do you mean make it worse? How can it be any worse? People
are dying all over the place. It's all over the news. Every day.
This is just horrible."
"So far, out of six billion people on earth, only about a
hundred have died. Most of those are on the other side of the
planet. That's not good for them, but the risk for us is way
smaller than it seems."
"Then why does it seem like it's everywhere? Why won't the TV
people stop talking about it?"
"Well, the TV people have all sworn a secret oath. They are to
maintain high professional standards, report the news as
objectively as possible and do whatever is necessary to scare
people to death. See? It's simple."
"I don't know ..."
"Sure, mother. Why do you think that if somebody walks into a
McDonald's and blows away a table of nuns, it makes the
headlines all over the country, but when 500 thousand people
walk into McDonald's and order Big Macs that same day, there's
not a peep out of the media."
"I don't know dear."
"Why do you think we always hear about airplanes crashing to the
ground, but never about airplanes taking off safely? Three hours
late, mind you, but safely nonetheless."
"Well ..."
"And why do you think that the media focus on the handful of
politicians involved in bribery, corruption, sex, violence,
nepotism, pick-pocketing, slander, lying, demagoguery and
falsifying their resumes, when they could probably find a
handful of upstanding, honest politicians?"
"OK, dear. Perhaps you are right. Perhaps the media is blowing
this politician thing out of proportion. But what about SARS?"
"SARS is simple. We all fight disease best when we are less
stressed. So everybody should take a vacation and relax on a
Mexican beach. Then SARS would be defeated."
"But dear, do you really think six billion of us can fit onto a
Mexican beach?"
"I suppose not. Which means we must take other measures to avoid
stress. We can start by avoiding stressful situations, such as
malicious colleagues, cantankerous in-laws and violent movies."
"OK, I'm taking notes."
"Make sure you get plenty of sleep."
"Why? Does SARS leave people alone while they sleep?"
"No, but well-rested people fight off diseases better than
worn-down, tired people."
"OK, what else?"
"Keep fit. Eat nutritious meals and get plenty of exercise."
"But won't exercise just wear me down? Then I'll be a sitting
duck for disease."
"Don't exercise THAT much. Just enough to keep fit. And pray.
"I can do that."
"And don't pick on people with slanted eyes. Believe it or not,
people are keeping clear of anybody who looks Chinese. I know
many people of Chinese ancestry who have never even been to
China. I know people born in China who have not been there for
years. Why avoid people based on their ancestry, when SARS began
just a few months ago?"
"I make decisions based on ancestry all the time, dear."
"You do, mother?"
"Sure, why do you think I am your biggest fan?"
About Author :
David Leonhardt is the Happy Guy, author of "Climb your Stairway
to Heaven: the 9 habits of maximum happiness". Sign up for your
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