I'm going to talk about sunglasses and how they are destroying the ignition system for sex and friendship our monkey society has depended on for millions of years.
But first I want to start with how I came to see the massive danger sunglasses pose to our society. It started when took a drug called 2,5-dimethoxy-4-(n)-propylthiophenethylamine, also known as T7. It's a drug designed by Alexander Shulgin, the father of ecstasy and author of thousands of psychoactive compounds. Ecstasy was an early discovery by Shulgin; it was for him what Henry Ford's Model-T was for the auto industry -- a dinky first effort that by dint of its mass production became a household name. By contrast, T7 is Shulgin's 485-horse power Ferrari 550 Maranello, a high-performance marvel of engineering, available to a handful of elites. Lucky me.
I took a dose of T7 with a friend right before going to a concert by the folksy, hokey band called The Gourds at a large indoor ole' fashioned wooden concert hall with a upper balcony. Just as the music started, the T7 started to hit. And here's what happened: the sound of music slowly turned off, I stood completely still, and all I could hear was the wood creaking from the rafters, and still more creaking on the wood floor panels as the crowd moved to the music.
And then I started looking at the crowd, and I felt sick to my stomach. What I saw was that the 400 or so people at the concert were all engaged in looking at each other for a period of a second or so before looking at the next person. Four hundred pairs of eyes constantly swiveling around looking at another set of eyes before moving to the next. Looking, looking, looking. Mix that in with the sound of wood creaking, and a crowd dancing to a six-part string band jamming out notes I couldn't hear.
Five minutes of this, and I needed out. So I went out on the sidewalk for a moment, which was a busy one at that time of night... and more looking.
I didn't get sick of it at all, and I don't in real life either. Neither do any of us. The T7 just helped me isolate what I do every day. It's a key thing to look at the monkey face as it gets near, opens the caf é door, or walks toward you on the street. Most of the time the monkey looks at you too, and the information passed in the looking sequence is vital. You're not really looking for eye contact, but it's usually made. Walking down the street in huge cities in New York doesn't stop the looking mechanism, despite the increase in volume of faces to stare at -- the process just goes much faster.
We use our eyes kind of like those supermarket scanners; we stare until the monkey face registers the barcode and beeps. I don't know about you, but I can do about 40 faces every three seconds in high-traffic moments. What's clear is this looking mechanism is highly developed -- and we share how to use it with each other as we look at each other... attractive girls teach you how to look at them, hideous birth-marked or scar-faced faces teach you how not to look at them, people who might become your friends let you know that you're OK. Sometimes a face and eyes will tell you that it's fine to stare at them and their quivering bodies, and other times they say don't dare.
It's so viral, so easily spread. We've been working on the monkey barcode stare for millions of years; we're losing our hair, losing our hunting skills, but the Looking we brought with us from the jungle is alive and well. And unlike oral tradition or weaving techniques that are invariably lost in mass genocides, it takes just one look from the victim to the face of an attacker to pass it on.
But unlike the minor stop-in-the-tracks effect of Burqas or ski goggles, the burgeoning sunglasses phenomenon is really, really fucking with the monkey face barcode apparatus. I'm worried folks. It's odd to go to a cafe and see 25 tables of shuttered monkey faces that don't let on the Message each has to share with you, can't receive a clear Message from you about the reaction their faces produce. It's the height of the cultural process and ultimate symbol of this Thing that has us all feeling so lonely, so alienated.
The sunglasses give license for the the users to lapse this social muscle, and the most prevalent users -- young folks -- are the ones supposed to be pairing up and fucking and having babies.
Not only this, but it's fucking with how we gather much of our information from the media. Tradition has it -- quite rightly -- that there's a monkey on the cover of every magazine. We made our judgments about Supreme Court nominee John G. Roberts by looking at his baby embryo face and freakish bloodshot eyes. But increasingly, they are showing us pictures of these people with sunglasses on. How the fuck were we supposed to react when we saw Judith Miller coming out of jail with black Prada wraparounds? That's the real cover up. Are we supposed to believe Maxim that Paris Hilton is a Rich Coke Babe when her barcode is hidden from view? Her body alone makes an unconvincing case that she may be one. We need to see the face.
I understand why it's tempting to wear sunglasses; it's to escape from this natural mechanism and enjoy the benefit of staring at all the monkey faces you want with no need to return the serve. But the Looking we do is just as vital as the need for transparent government -- it's all over if we can't see what's going on.