What
kind of things those are that appear good to the many, we may learn even from
this.
For
if any man should conceive certain things as being really good, such as
prudence, temperance, justice, and fortitude, he would not after having first
conceived these endure to listen to anything which should not be in harmony
with what is really good.
But
if a man has first conceived as good the things that appear to the many to be
good, he will listen and readily receive as very applicable that which was said
by the comic writer. Thus even the many perceive the difference.
For
were it not so, this saying would not offend and would not be rejected in the
first case, while we receive it when it is said of wealth, and of the means
which further luxury and fame, as said fitly and wittily.
Go
on, then, and ask if we should value and think those things to be good, to
which after their first conception in the mind the words of the comic writer
might be aptly applied—that he who has them, through pure abundance has not a
place to ease himself in.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5 (tr
Long)
I will
sometimes feel like we live in an age overrun with too much satire, mockery,
and ridicule, though even the briefest survey of history will remind me that
people have always been drawn in by the abuse of humor to dismiss and degrade.
I suspect I simply notice it so much around me, and therefore assume it is a
sign of the times, because I have often come to recognize it as a form of
self-importance through cruelty.
The
problem is hardly about laughing, but rather about laughing at others, instead of laughing with them. That distinction is clearly
drawn by our intentions. Friends will laugh and joke together, but among
enemies, one will laugh while the other grits his teeth.
I have
always been a committed trickster and joker, much like my father, and I have
sometimes managed to pull off the most involved of gags, at the expense of both
others and myself. I usually work with a
straight face and just a touch of subtle sarcasm. Yet few things fill me with
regret as much as having ended up being brutally offensive, in a terribly
failed attempt at being amusing. A bad joke told to the first girl I ever
danced with cost me what could well have been my first date. I hope you’ve managed
to forgive me by now, Jennifer.
Marcus
Aurelius observes how the way we use humor reveals quite a bit about what we
know is truly right and good, whether explicitly or implicitly. We are all
quite ready to make fun of the things that vulgar people care about, and even
vulgar people themselves will hoot and holler about their own vices. “It’s
funny because it’s so true!”
But most
people, unless they are deeply disturbed, will never find it amusing to mock decency.
We can laugh about vices, but there’s really nothing to laugh about with
virtue. A greedy lawyer is completely hilarious, but a compassionate lawyer is
just a nice fellow, if you can manage to find one. You can pull off a joke
about a priest if he is a drunk or a lecher, but you can’t pull off a joke
about a priest if he is humble and pious. People who love money and fame are fair game, but people who love their neighbors not so much. Ned Flanders is really only funny as a foil to Homer Simpson.
Whenever
anyone tries to be funny about what is right and good, most people will either
shrug and turn away, or become indignant and offended.
Even in
the most irreverent of times and places, there is that line we must not cross.
When I was younger, my friends and I would joke about most anything. Personal
quirks, annoying habits and attitudes, sex, politics, even the questionable
topics of culture and race, were fair game in our circle.
There
were two places, however, we did not dare to go, unless we wanted a good
beating. I imagine it has long been much the same for most fun-loving men,
whether they are solid guys or scoundrels.
One did
not joke about another man’s religion, and one did not joke about the women in
a man’s life. That included his wife, but especially his sisters and his
mother. This says a little something about what my crowd thought was genuinely
good in life.
The
specifics may differ, but the principle remains the same. One way we can
distinguish good from bad is that we don’t stand for the mockery of what is
truly good.
Now one
reason I will feel uncomfortable with what passes as contemporary humor is how
I perceive that line moving dangerously close, or being ignored entirely. Even
then, however, what seems an exception is just another modification of the
rule. Again, when we twist humor simply to insult and belittle those we
dislike, we can only manage it by giving them bad attributes, whether they are
real or imagined. We make fun of an honest man by suggesting he is really a
hypocrite, or a kind man by saying he is actually obsequious.
Humor
can be a very subjective thing, and a very touchy thing, and we can either use
it well or abuse it. Whatever the case, it always exposes something about our
real values.
Written in 5/2006
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