There is a scene from John Frankenheimer’s 1962 cold
war thriller, The Manchurian Candidate,
that has always stuck with me. A sweaty, paranoid Frank Sinatra is explaining away
the pile of books on a table he’s studying, enraptured with, fascinated by,
drawn to:
Principles
of Modern Banking
The
History of Piracy
Paintings
of Orozco
Modern
French Theater
The
Jurisprudential Factor of Mafia Administration
Diseases
of Horses
The
Novels of Joyce Cary
Ethnic
Choices of the Arabs
Now, Sinatra, as Major Bennett Marco, is playing a
Korean War vet struggling with partially-revealed aftereffects of psychological
warfare and brainwashing.
What’s my excuse? In the past month I’ve been studying,
enraptured with, fascinated by, drawn to:
General
George Custer and the Battle of Little Bighorn
Fascist
Buddhism
The
exact authorship of Lennon-McCartney song compositions
Sherlock
Holmes short stories
Various
Interpretations of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey
I’ve always been like this. In a given year I’ll be
all over and all about the Dewey Decimal system, over and over, like a bee with
ADD pollinating a patch of clover in a flowerbox. But it’s frustrating, and
tiresome. Just once I’d like to wake up and say, authoritatively and with
unfathomable certitude: “I must commit the rest of my life to the History of
Piracy!” Or fascist Buddhism. Something. Anything.
I’m pulled in a million directions and like anything
pulled in such a way, I feel diluted. I am diluted.
Or I can just be sleep-deprived.
That’s probably it. Went to bed past midnight last
night, and got up a little before five this morning.
I’ll have to read up on sleep habits, REM sleep, lucid
dreaming, how to get better quality shut-eye, sleep techniques of ancient
Tibetans.
Yes.
Add that to the pile.
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