FRESH
YARN presents:
Keep
it to Yourself
By Albert
Stern
After the
9/11 attacks, Christmas season was too soon upon us in New York, arriving
just weeks after the fires had been extinguished and the smell of burning
dissipated downtown. For nearly two months, cycles of palpable, pervasive
fear about a follow-up attack would somehow gather momentum around a rumor
or milestone, and then build to arbitrary anticlimaxes that provided neither
relief nor hope. The collective subterranean ebb and flow of emotion reached
a crescendo at Halloween, after which most people, exhausted, seemed to
calm down. Life must go on, but as Yuletide approached, the WTC wreckage
was still several stories high and you could see and hear the cranes working
nonstop. Nobody was happy, least of all near the site.
Business
brought me close to the WTC one day that December. Heading downtown on
Broadway, I walked past the makeshift memorial lining the churchyard of
St. Paul's Chapel, one block east. Standing in front were fifteen or so
well-scrubbed members of an "I-don't-agree-with-everything-Pat Robertson-says-but-you-have-to-admit-that-sometimes..."
church group from the amber fields of grain singing "The 12 Days
of Christmas." They were merry and bright and against this backdrop
of decimation, earnestly demonstrating that people of good will could
flout evil with good cheer, none more so than the Jethro whose role it
was to it was to goofball up "FIVE GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOWLDEN RIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINGS-AH!"
So figure
I was already in a mood. I walked into a branch of my bank on Broadway
across from the WTC hoping the ATM would dispense some cash. I get a bit
uneasy at the bank, since I have little aptitude or patience for things
fiscal, and keep track of my balances in a zenlike manner, an approach
that often leads to a profound state of emptiness. As I stepped up to
the ATM and inserted my card, still looking mainly at Ground Zero framed
in the picture window, I glanced down at the screen and read the following
message:
DURING THE HOLIDAYS, SHARE THE SPIRIT OF THE SEASON
BUT PLEASE -- KEEP YOUR PAIN TO YOURSELF.
Your pain?
But the screen was gone, replaced by the menu of banking options.
My pain.
Of course. At that place at that time, the overriding emotion was pain.
Pain was the holiday season's buzzword, definitively expressed by a creative
bit of business my girlfriend encountered in a subway station: someone
had torn up some "WET PAINT" signs and reassembled the pieces
so the message read "AIN'T WE IN PAIN." Now a cash machine,
instead of just asking me if I wanted a receipt, was trying to help me
get on with things.
And why not
the ATM, even if its tone was, in my opinion, somewhat flip? If you want
to communicate a message to as many New Yorkers as possible it's as good
a way as any, at least until psychotherapists, like professional golfers,
start selling advertising space on their clothing. I've always thought
New Yorkers feel emotionally vulnerable when banking at ATMs -- you can
see it in their posture around the machines, hunched over like a dog over
a food dish, and not only because of the energetic criminal population
in our midst. Maybe it's just that too many a New York drama has reached
its cruel denouement with an unyielding ATM serving as the machina
in which the god Penurious descends.
One has only
to recall the bank lines in the last few days of 1999 to realize the depth
of the public's fear that someday, somehow, the cash machines will stop
giving them what they need. Personally, I was surprised at the millennium
to find that more people worried about their ATMs than were grappling
with my preoccupation -- that at long last the Messiah actually would
show up, and ruin everything.
As for the ATM instruction to "keep your pain to yourself" --
consider the scene my bank's lobby overlooked. After all that the people
who worked at this branch went through on 9/11, it was reasonable enough
to assume that they had their fill of talking about it. Why wouldn't they
program the ATMs with a little preemptive message to indicate as much?
They saw the fire, metal, and the desperate rain down as they fled for
their own lives, and had no doubt spent the last few months wondering
how many familiar faces were gone forever. And now you come in caroling
"The 12 Days of Christmas" because you feel the need to connect?
Well buddy, wassail this. I remember that when I sat shiva after
my mother passed, visitor after visitor first told me how much they loved
her and then launched into their own tales of scabbed-over woe to keep
my fresh anguish at arm's length. What I wanted to say to my shiva callers
then is what I'm sure the workers at this bank wanted to tell the parade
of well-intentioned sufferers: I know you're in pain, but please -- keep
it to yourself. Just say, "Thank You, Happy Holidays" when the
teller gives you the roll of quarters you need to do laundry, and go on
mourning quietly amongst yourselves.
The machine
dispensed the cash. After my receipt printed, I waited for the screen
to refresh so I could reread the welcome message.
When it reappeared,
it read:
DURING THE HOLIDAYS, SHARE THE SPIRIT OF THE SEASON
BUT PLEASE
-- KEEP YOUR PIN TO YOURSELF.
PIN. Your
personal identification number. Oh.
When I opened
the door to leave the bank, I was met with the whine of gnarled metal
being pulled apart by demolition machines. Although each day more of the
ruined towers beyond the barricades in front of me vanished from sight,
it was apparent as the holidays encroached that there was still a lot
of hard, hopeless work left to do at the World Trade Center.
The spirit
of the season? There is more I could share, but I'll keep it to myself.
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