You would think that at least one of them would know when it was time to duck…
Consider if Dali and Einstein had conversations about time. It could’ve happened. Dali was a mere 25 years younger than Einstein. Could either man have discussed his obsession with not obsessing about time without using time to do it? For Albert’s part, it may be that matter can be neither created nor destroyed but what about time? And does his theory of relativity extend to how we choose to use our time?
It is a Friday in a suburban high school, a day that exists with more time built into it for non-productivity, as evidenced by the casual Fridays trend. I see paraprofessional Nick Stern sitting at a desk at a hallway intersection evidently on hall duty. Nick attended the same school where he sits now, thirty years later, keeping the hallways safe for democracy. He is a robust gent who fits gingerly into the student desk outside the corner photocopier room. I miss seeing Nick shelving books in the library where I patiently serve our adolescent future. As much as he lumberingly complains about the Sisyphusian task of shelving library books (remarkably reminiscent of Eeyore of the Hundred Acre Forest), I do believe that he used to enjoy the daily banter in our humble institution within an institution. Our Mr. Stern was wearing a rarity, a newish sweatshirt in a lovely shade of Wildcat purple. I asked him if he had an allegiance to Northwestern University and, in fact, he said that NU was his favorite team – in all sports.
So I had stopped to chat with Nick and time commenced to alter for us both. People might say that time flew or time dragged; but in these instances of deliberate expenditures of personal contact for the enriching purpose of adding a drop of humanity to a beaker-full day of perfunctory salutations, it feels rather that time expands and starts to float. Some might say that it flows. What other elements are interacting that together create a condition that fosters a decision to stop and chat?
Did Einstein consider that the molecules in the atmosphere alter relative, not only to scientifically measured temperature, but also to the change in temperature caused by humans interacting in a socially acceptable and pleasing manner? What if there is a pattern to be found that can connect his work with Brownian movement of molecules, relativity, energy, matter, and time?
Why stop there? How about Dali’s melting clocks showing us the complete relativity of time? Was Salvador’s admiration of Freud based on the aspect of time in dreams and hallucinations or merely on the body of work that is his legacy? I would like to see Dali’s clocks blown up like balloons and stuck in the tree branches instead of hanging there, melting away. Maybe Magritte would paint the floating clocks like so many orbs in the sky.
Nick and I could have talked about college sports, our high school teams, and so much more. But Nick knows that I have to stick to the bell schedule and I judge my time with him and his counterparts as best as I can. Of course, my predilection to continue to visit with staff has its’ own cause and effect. My time to sleep is reduced; I arrive at school between 5:30 and 6:00 a.m. every morning so that I can get a good head start on my own work before the rest of the world wakes up. I struggle with the paradox of my appetite for high touch repartee. Time simultaneously floats away while squeezing the productivity out of my day.
Ah, well. Back at the bar, maybe Salvador and Albert were going to meet Sigmund and Rene. Imagine the looks around the table, time standing still while they wait for someone to pick up the check.