Sunday, 26 May 2013

How does anyone survive to adulthood?

According to the World Health Organisation, someone born in South Africa in the early sixties, (e.g. me), could expect to live forty seven years.  

Unaware of this somewhat disturbing statistic, but with seeming instinctive brilliance, I moved to New Zealand at the age of forty six, where life expectancy is about ninety five.  Scandinavians are apparently tracking very near the one hundred mark, but the extra years didn’t seem worth the extreme climate and learning a language with little circles above the A’s and all the O’s crossed out.  My hope is that I have a reasonable chance of beating the system with just the bad hair I already have and a fake Kiwi accent that I am working on by watching a lot of day-time TV.  

It’s not that I am paranoid, just that I was present during all of life’s attempts to end mine prematurely and I do wonder how I made it this far.  In fact I am continually surprised to see fully mature specimens of the male persuasion thronging the planet.  I am sure any one of them selected at random would be able to reel off a dozen or so accounts of running/falling/climbing/jumping into/off/ through a glass door/river/gorge/tree-house.  Not to mention external forces like fire, water, ice, their brother’s chemistry set, their father’s drinks cabinet or their mother’s car.

Naturally, every boy’s memory of events past tends to be somewhat unreliable, with stories of near-death experiences taking on seemingly fantastic proportions in the re-telling.  One theory is that this is in preparation for being able to recount interesting boyhood stories to one’s grandchildren, but in my own experience I think the accounts of what actually happened are modified immediately to avoid having your life terminated by your parents when they find out what you did.


This also explains why everyone knows it is dangerous to run with scissors, and yet no-one has ever been injured doing so or has ever heard of anyone who has.  It’s because you know that if you stabbed yourself while running with scissors your mom will kill you, so instead you invent a story where a boy you have never seen before (and will never see again) attempted to sever your femoral artery with a blackboard compass during double geometry.

File:Johannesburg-c1910.jpg

In speaking to my father, I have learned that my close brushes with extinction began long before 1962.  Himself a veteran of beating the system, he recalls that as a boy he would play a game involving cutting loops of rubber from a motorcar inner tube and shooting them into the overhead power-lines where they would become stuck, to be shot down by other boys with their loops of rubber - the idea presumably being to see who could dislodge the most loops.  I am surprised that Sony has not formulated a version of this game for their Playstation as the concept sounds riveting.  

You can imagine the scene - a dusty street somewhere in the suburbs of Johannesburg, everything in black and white with the corners of the buildings yellowing and cracked (the way they always are in photos of that time), and all the cars with no inner tubes of course. 

My father and the rest of the flannel shorts brigade have managed to get all their loops stuck in the power lines.  Someone suggests throwing their shoes up to dislodge a batch so the game can continue but my father points out that none of them have had any shoes since the war.  By this stage a small crowd has gathered and a minor scuffle breaks out when someone volunteers his sister’s doll in a bid to get the game going again.

I guess it is just in the nature of boys not to give up and being the carrier of the stupidly heroic gene in our family, my father offers to climb the pole and manually release the loops.  I guess there is something to be said for a country where wood is plentiful but that country is not South Africa.  The math goes something like this: bare feet plus metal pole plus 380 volts of three-phase power at an elevation of one mile up in the sky equals a whole new way to entertain the street.

In a move that was to become a regular in the arsenal of survival tips for later generations my father landed on his head and was therefore un-injured by the fall apart from sustaining a broken arm, no doubt from the whip-lash effect.  Being left-handed and therefore fairly useless anyway, he hardly noticed the impairment but apparently my grandmother did start wondering why the jerseys she knitted for him from then on had one odd-shaped sleeve...