Wednesday, December 29, 2010

He's a Survivor?

Ashton Kutcher schools us on the coming apocalypse
In an undeniably kooky interview for the new issue of Men's Fitness, the "Dude, Where's My Car?" star explains his motivation for keeping in shape. It's not to keep himself bankable as a movie star. It's not because Demi likes a man with a little definition. It's so that when our fragile civilization turns into a Michael Bay movie, he will not be the nerdy scientist/rookie cop/loveable old timer with two days till retirement. "All of my physical fitness regimen is completely tailored around the end of day," he explains. "I stay fit for no other reason than to save the people I care about."


But I'm going to say something here I never imagined I'd write. That Ashton Kutcher guy has a point. Even more horrifying, it's the same valid point Sarah Palin occasionally lands on amidst her numerous nuggets of nonsense. We are astonishingly dependent on technology. And technology fails all the freaking time.


The recent havoc wreaked on London's air transportation system after a far-from-snowpocalyptic six inches of the white stuff, the horror show that left 400 passengers stranded for hours on a New York subway and the current nightmare unfolding in Moscow's airport proves that something as simple and uncontrollable as the weather can cause all hell to break loose. And that's just the realm of not even catastrophic acts of nature. Consider a few other possibilities -- say, a mining mishap, an oil spill an earthquake -- and any notions that the works won't get gummed up again soon (and in ways we can't imagine) begin to fade. As Carrie Fisher once chillingly summed it up: "Someone can change the course of history with a box cutter."


But the way many of us who live in the relative comforts of the developed world take for granted that the heat will turn on, the phone signal will be sufficiently strong and that our food will come from the place it always comes from -- the supermarket -- does give pause. I'm not saying we'd all be better off if we learned to chop down trees or wrestle bears, but it sure couldn't hurt to have an emergency supply kit, a degree of physical fitness and some mad first aid skills. Whether the four horsemen show up or not, competence and self-reliance are always empowering. It doesn't have to be all weird and Branch Davidian. It doesn't even have to be the rather paranoid rantings of a handsome actor. But when Kutcher says, "I'm going to be ready to take myself and my family to a safe place where they don’t have to worry," it implies a degree of foresight and protectiveness that's quite admirable -- and exceedingly rare. So while civilization may never need Asthon Kutcher to come to its rescue, his words are a helpful reminder to check the batteries in the flashlights and portable radio. And as a model of disaster preparedness, he may have found his best role yet.
That is the real point - be prepared, learn a skill, stay aware. But I do disagree with the article - I think we all would be better off if we knew how to chop down a tree - SAFELY!

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