Saturday, July 9, 2016

Slowing Things Down


     Something has come up which I need to report and  invite discussion . Yesterday, a young black man was shot to death while sitting in his car.  His killer was a white police officer.   But the striking thing to me was the rhythmic speed of the event.  On the one hand the officer  seemed  to be in fast forward while we could see that the young black man was shot was nearly dead already.   But the girlfriend sitting to the right of the victim was talking to the officer in slow measured tones.  It was as though she knew that the officer was not in control and was trying to bring him into focus and slow him down.  But the officer continued to point his weapon at the nearly dead victim though the officer was visibly shaking.  It was as if the officer was speeded up in his mind and was unable to slow himself down. But the girl in the passenger side of the car was trying very carefully, and, I think thoughtfully, to slow the officer down.  I suspect that the victim who was searching for his registration was speeded up as well but I did not see that firsthand.  The video will be shown over and over on television. So you might look at it, if you have the stomach for that sort of thing, and tell me what you conclusion you reach. It appears that there is a problem in the rhythm and speed of the event. I have talked to a few people who were puzzled to the extent that they wondered if there was something staged but it also seemed surreal.

     Baseball has a reputation for many people as being slow and dull; but in most cases both the pitcher and the batter are trying to slow themselves down so as to be able to focus cleanly on what they are doing.  If they allow themselves too much of the intensity of the moment they will not be able to focus and slow down.  You may notice the pitcher adjusting his cap repeatedly as well is fiddling with this necklace and adjusting his sleeves in his jersey and scraping his foot on the mound until occasional baseball watcher is pretty well bored by the process. But at this point the pitcher has slowed down enough to pitch effectively.   Then it is the batters routine to adjust and readjust his batting gloves with each swing and stare blindly at the bat for a moment before finally looking at the pitcher.  He may ask for time and step out of the batter's box only to step right back in.  Who knows what this is all about except people know baseball?  They know that the batter is also trying to slow himself down.

     Now, with help, we may come up with a scenario for officers in prisons or in the street to find ways that they can slow themselves down as well as slowing down the person they are engaging in an encounter and possible arrest.  I can think of no situation in which a speeding up of this process will improve the thinking and right action of either the officer or the person facing arrest.  

     And I also wonder about myself.  I am finding that I am spending a lot of attention to slowing myself down.  In the last few months I no longer listen to the sound on television but only to the picture.  The sound seems to be happening too fast; people are talking too fast and the scenes are often changing too fast.  I find myself in prayer trying to solve the problem through repetition of prayer.  I favor slow music most of the time. For over a year I return over and over to a Philip Glass composition, The Visitors, because it always helps me to slow down.

      In looking through the glass darkly (which are vague memories as alcohol memories seem to be) I remember in my drinking days that my notion was that the troubled state of mind was between drinking episodes but things seemed relaxed while the alcohol was still in me.  So I drank to slow things down only to find them speeding up again. So the expedient but irrational answer was to drink fairly continuously.

     I am looking for resources to develop scenarios that might help correctional officers and other law enforcement people find methods for slowing themselves down.  That could prevent a disaster.  That might also tell them something about whether their alcohol consumption or other drug use might be contributing to their dilemma about how to conduct themselves in an emergency situation. 

     But we need some structure and trying to find a way to do this.  This morning at Lisa's CafĂ© everyone was talking at the same time and I did not come away with very much but I did feel tremendous affection for all of the folks at Lisa’s Cafe.  It was like puppies in a pile.   At first the Double Circle Group will not be nearly as much fun as puppies in a pile; but it is a learning process.  The two circles balance each other and the two people who are supporting each other find they can complement each other's ego and awareness.  We can see some of the field of view of our partner in the other circle can see the how we might act in their situation.   Just after I began writing this, I heard that Sadie Darnell the Sheriff of Alachua County had decided to place deputies on patrol in pairs.