Humor: What, me worry?
Rogue asteroids, super volcanos, tsunamis, Iraq, Bush, Kerry.... What do these have in common?
- They cause people to worry
- They can impact our lives
But humans are not like "most animals". As a species, we have learned to ignore most threats. We will build our cities next to active volcanoes... think Pompeii... or on floodplains or sandbars. Oh, we will leave the location if the situation seems dangerous, but we come back. We "assess" the danger and have "contingency plans".
When it comes to truly cataclysmic events, we accept the possibility that they may happen and that "lives will be lost"... but probably not ours.
How is it that we can go about our everyday lives with all of these grave threats to our existence? Distance. Our minds do a risk assessment and we prioritize our concerns. So the super volcano that could wipe out much of mankind may be there in the background, but the chance of it happening in our lifetime is too distant... too remote... to cause us to give it much concern. The war in Iraq is closer, but for most of us it is a point of debate more than a concern about our personal safety. Who becomes our next president is a little closer to home, but we all know that after the smoke and mirrors go away that our lives will continue pretty much the same no matter who is making deals from the White House.
We "worry" about the "big" things... but not really. Our concerns are more mundane: work, bills, flu shots, lawns... the things close to us. All the big things are great conversation topics, but our focus is much closer to home. We leave the big worries to others... professional worriers... journalists, environmentalists, politicians, researchers. We'll worry about the big things when they tell us to worry.
Maybe.