I am astounded by the degree to which humans can be
debilitated and still function – or appear to function.
At age 62, my father was found to
have severe cardiovascular disease with 90% blockage in one coronary artery and
70% blockage in three others. He eventually
had a quadruple bypass operation and lived another 25 fruitful years – with an
artificial hip, arthritis, and BPH, besides.
But, through it all, he only ever missed a couple of Sundays teaching
Bible Study and never forfeited his “country farm” garden until the very
last.
Rosa came highly recommended to the
Chairman’s lab as a Senior Technical Associate.
She had been the manager of a sizeable federal contract research program
at a private lab just across town. [The
contract was expiring and the head of the program – who, in fact, had highly
recommended her – was retiring.] Rosa
turned out to be “a real piece of work”.
She dressed “to the nines” – which was substantial overkill for a lab-rat,
had just married one of the top graduating medical students [her second
marriage], and was a “drama queen”, the likes of which I had never encountered
before. She claimed to have used the
divorce settlement money from her original marriage plus some of her retirement
money to outfit a personal contracting lab in a warehouse somewhere
downtown. She was occasionally late or
distracted by major daily crises involving a plethora of disparate friends, associates
and family members. She showed up
faithfully for regular lab meetings but was MIA at odd times throughout the day. And she produced a variable volume of data
which could not be corroborated by other lab staff. After nine weeks, Rosa had to be let go. Things just weren’t adding up. As it turned out, Rosa was discovered to have
a drug addiction with a pathological Prima Donna complex masquerading as a
near-functional human being.
“Roughly
19% of adults experience a diagnosable mental health issue, federal data shows,
and countless more go through a tough time without talking about it.” [Mandy Oaklander, Time, March 16, 2015, p.
24]
It’s the number of under-the-radar, non-diagnosable
compromised individuals that gives one harrowing pause … a number that is not
only “countless”, but undoubtedly huge.
An underdeveloped or damaged
prefrontal cortex leaves one stuck in adolescence, with truncated executive
brain function. “Heavy
drinkers also experience the frontal lobe system double whammy: They may lose
certain capabilities, such as impulse control or motor coordination or the
ability to drive safely, but they aren't aware that they've lost them -- or
simply don't care -- so they forge ahead anyway." The Organized Mind: Thinking Straight in
the Age of Information Overload [Daniel J. Levitin, Penguin Group,
2014.]
The Social Security Administration now recognizes over 200
“Compassionate Allowance” conditions and, as
of 2013, more than 14 million persons, nationwide, were receiving disability
payments. [NOTE: While these
individuals are not deemed “abled” for all profitable purposes, many are,
nonetheless, functional to a point of moderately manageable survival and do not
require supportive care. Thus, they can
appear, for all practical purposes, as functionally “normal”.]
“The number of
Americans receiving federal disability payments has nearly doubled over the
last 15 years. There are towns and counties around the nation where almost 1/4
of [working age] adults are on disability ... Planet
Money reporter, Chana Joffe-Walt … [particularly singled out] Hale County,
Alabama.”
[http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/490/trends-with-benefits]
On the “flip side”, we encounter more than a handful of Unlikely
Champions – i.e., individuals who are born with or acquire life-altering handicaps
or functional deficits by which they are “compromised” in many different ways,
yet, through sheer fortitude of the human spirit, they are able to rise to the top
of their chosen field. [viz., Wilma
Rudolph, Christy Brown (“My Left Foot”),
Stephen Hawking (“A Brief History of Time”,
etc.]
Thus, a “Compromised” circumstance is sometimes a figment of
the beholder – or the beholden.
Truth be told, we’re all “Compromised” in some way(s). We’re not tall enough, strong enough,
attractive enough, skilled enough, “polished” enough, smart enough, coordinated
enough, confident enough, talented enough, “lucky” enough, etc., to make it through
life without substantial extra effort
and more than a little sacrifice. We
also tend to have, and often cultivate, extended “dependencies”. Add to this: warped values, unsound judgment, and
lack of discipline – plus prejudice and the customary vices – and one has to
wonder, seriously, how much legitimate hope there is for any real progress in
the universe!
LOS
ANGELES (CNN, October 22, 2013) – [A] Video of Glenn Taylor [a “leave no
footprint” Boy Scout leader] shoving the huge rock off a slender pedestal
boulder in Utah's Goblin Valley State Park, where it rested for millions of
years, went viral online and prompted media scrutiny ...
[Taylor had] filed a personal injury lawsuit just a few weeks earlier,
claiming he suffers from "serious, permanent and debilitating injuries." http://www.wptv.com/news/national/glenn-taylor-man-who-toppled-rock-formation-at-goblin-valley-state-park-filed-claim-for-injuries
… perhaps a “serious,
permanent and debilitating mental condition … “
* * * * * * * * * * *
The Pareto Principle holds that 80% of real progress comes
from 20% of those involved. That 20% may
be our only hope! They are the “Change
Agents” … the leaders … the doers … the “keepers of the flame”. Yes, they are all “compromised”! But they’re fighting back, fighting through
their challenges and compromised circumstances, and fighting FOR a better life … a better world … a better
tomorrow.
Compromise be damned …
Be an uncompromising TOP 20!
Quartermaster
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