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Friday, August 16, 2019

Radiation Canaries

I’m reading Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert (author of Eat Pray Love) and I’m really enjoying it so far. One thing she talked about made me think. The section is called “Radiation Canaries.” She’s making a 30 Rock reference where Jack tells Liz (because Liz is a writer) she would be basically useless in a post-apocalyptic world. Elizabeth Gilbert, who is obviously a writer, strangely agrees with Jack. This exchange reminded me of a conversation I had with my dad a few years ago.
There’s a place in Colorado called Cheyenne Mountain. If you don’t know what that is- it’s a mountain, duh? Kidding, well I’m not because it is but inside the mountain is a little military place called NORAD. (Fun fact on the outside of the mountain is a zoo, which I don’t know why but has always tickled me. There’s a hardcore military place, but just outside on the other side is a zoo.)  The inside is designed to withstand bombing and fallout from a nuclear bomb. Somehow the conversation we were having turned into someone saying “I’d try to get into NORAD in the event of a nuclear war.” (Don’t bother, you can’t. Unless you’re military and/or have clearance- sorry Civi.) I said: “In the event of a nuclear war that turns the world into a barren waste zombie land- I have almost no interest in surviving. But lets pretend we did get into NORAD. I would be virtually useless.” To which my dad attested. For those of you who don’t know my dad- he’s incredibly intelligent. Math seems to come naturally like breathing, and Neil deGrasse Tyson level science makes sense. He’d be an asset to NORAD post imaginary war world, and probably even present day. Honestly, if I didn’t look so much like him I’d think I wasn’t his daughter. I inherited none of that…moving on.
He disagreed that I’d be useless. At first I thought he meant it as a nod to “I’m a woman and I can repopulate the earth.” To my surprise I was wrong. He said: “There are plenty of people in that place that can already do what I do. You have something different than me. You’re creative, you think differently. That’s an asset.” 

So to Elizabeth, I’d have to respectfully disagree. I believe we would be an asset in a post-apocalyptic world. There’s a reason literature is taught in schools. It’s important for society to tell stories. Your imagination can be a powerful tool, and more than just a radiation canary. As it turns out, the math nerds’ might just need us after all. What would your job be in a post-apocalyptic world?

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