Risk or Die
Once upon a time, a woman risked her life to have a
child. With no medical equipment,
doctors, nurses, or even clean water, she lay down in a hut and offered the
possibility of her life in exchange for the possibility of our collective
future. In times past, child-birth entailed
the very real risk of a mother losing her life. And yet, that risk was
taken. Our existence depended on her
choice to take that risk. Without her
choice, we would not exist at all and human life, with all of its joys and
sorrows would cease. In a very real
sense she gifted us the future by risking her life. For all of human existence, we have had to
navigate risk. For living itself
requires risk.
We are now faced with a deadly risk. A disease that has no cure and no
vaccine. This is not new to
humanity. We have lived with multiple,
deadly diseases that had to cure and no vaccine for many thousands of years. Living and dying with these diseases has
simply been part of doing the business of living on this plant. It has been a long, long time since humanity
has had to live with the specter of deadly and incurable transmissible
disease. And we understandably are
having a hard time trying to figure out how to respond and cope.
Life in centuries past was grim compared to modern
standards. People lived shorter lives,
and many died in childhood. People
responded to this with the same kind of resignation and grim fortitude that we
demonstrate in the face of things like cancer.
We resigned ourselves to the inevitable risks and attempted to minimize
those risks in the best way we knew. And
science, such as it was depending on the time, did its best to help people
navigate those risks. But mostly people
carried on with their work and play. In
other words, they tended to the business of living. Afterall, food had to be produced, shelter had
to be constructed, and all the necessities of living had to come from
somewhere. They had no choice in the
matter. Essentially, they either worked
and possibly lived, or did not and most assuredly died.
We are blessed to have incredible science to help inform our
choices. And we are blessed to have
enough wealth to allow us to pause the business of our living as we to try to
figure out the most beneficial approach.
But at some point we are faced with the same inevitable calculus. We either work, or we die. We either risk or die. In the end, that inexorable fact haunts
humanity in the same way it did 3000 years ago.
We are defined by that equation.
The business of engaging in the work required to live always
requires such trade-offs of risk and reward.
And those trade-offs implicitly, and sometimes explicitly, often require
us to choose between life and death. We
make these calculations all the time. We
know that driving 65 miles and hour is more risky than driving 10 miles an
hour. We know that 30,000 people die
each year in auto accidents. And yet, we
do not have a 10 mile and hour speed limit.
And yet, we pile our children into our cars and drive everyday knowing
that every time we do so, we place ourselves and our children at risk of
death. We could certainly reduce auto
deaths to almost nonexistent if we reduced our speed limits to 10 miles per
hour. But we don’t. We don’t because that would be too
inconvenient. We would not get to where
we want to be quickly enough.
Every day, we make the choice to place our loved ones in
mortal danger because we calculate the reward of getting where we want to be
quickly and efficiently to be worth the risk of the death of our children. Certainly, we have worked hard to minimize
the risk through improved safety features in our cars, but the risk
remains. And we consistently choose to
take that risk.
And of course we do.
Life requires us to take such risk.
We couldn’t live at all without taking those risks. We tend to not think about such things, but
nevertheless, we make such calculations all the time in every facet of our
lives. Every time you fly in an
airplane, every time you cross a busy street, every time you take medicine,
every time you go skiing, every time you eat a piece of pizza that you left out
from your party the night before. The
risks are minimal, but they are ever present.
The business of being alive requires you to take risks.
In light of our current situation, we are faced with grim
calculations of risk. The debate rages
over what risks are acceptable and what risks are too much for us to bear. And yet, the equation that defines us, work
or die, risk or die, lurks in the background.
At some point we will have to emerge from hiding and face that
risk. And that point may be sooner than
we think. We may well have to rebuild
the muscles of fortitude and grim resignation that our ancestors had fully
developed in order to maintain our existence.
We may have to boldly risk, just like the woman in the hut did so long
ago. Until we figure out how to avoid
the entropic certainty of work, we simply cannot sustain an idle
population. In a very real sense, the
universe itself will not allow it.
Thank you. I will write again soon.
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