I am a doctor, but more accurately, I was a practicing doctor…..but
now I am thankfully retired.
Nevertheless, you can’t automatically assume that I know anything about doctors’
office waiting rooms. But why
write about such an exciting topic? Maybe you want to be bored out of your mind by another
ranting blog that goes nowhere, filled and confused by a swarm of
run-on-sentences. If so, read on.
To me, there is no better venue to describe human behavior
than in public places? Indeed, I
could also write about behavior in a train station, an airport, a bus, any
street, a busy restaurant, etc.
Importantly, my age gives me the historical license to describe the
profound changes in human behavior that have taken place over the last 5
decades in public places. Nothing
I describe is novel or earth shattering.
But that doesn’t change the fact that it is a bit frightening and painfully
regressive.
The picture above pilfered from the internet even outdates
my days of waiting to be seen by my “doctor”. But it’s not too far off the mark. You see people sitting, some reading, a child, others
listening to the nurse, undoubtedly some are talking quietly to each other,
they are dressed nicely and the atmosphere appears civilized. Of course, it doesn’t hurt to have a
small office, some natural light shining through the windows, and not too much
“stuff” to distract the waiting patrons.
These are the pros of the waiting rooms of the past.
What about the cons? I admit that time moves slowly in such a waiting area,
especially if you are alone with no one to talk to, little to nothing to read, anxious
about seeing the “doctor” or have some persistent medical condition that is
unresolved. (At least the
experiences are varied unlike that biyearly visit to you know who – waiting to
have your mouth invaded, your tongue stretched in unnatural ways, your teeth
picked and prodded, drilled, sanded and cleaned, all the while your dental
hygienist or dentist asks you questions that they know your mouth is too
preoccupied to answer. I apologize
for this side bar distraction).
I remember that even babies crying loudly would be taken out
of the office waiting room to the hallway or outside the building. People took responsibility for their
kids crying episodes because they were sensitive to other people’s space and
entitlement of privacy and quiet.
My wife exemplified this trait during any outing with our WELL BEHAVED
CHILDREN. I guess the real
problem, which caused her the greatest anxiety, occurred on an airplane during
the infrequent times when we travelled as a family. Obviously, there was nowhere to hide the screaming
brat if one of them acted out. Our
solution was to overdose (kidding) them with Benadryl in order to avoided this
possibility altogether, which kept them sedated and manageable and did wonders
for us as well.
In those days, I really can’t remember sitting in a waiting
room where anyone was talking loudly, while imposing their ignorant rants on
the rest of us. Certainly those
days preceded the global use of cell phones (and other hand held devices),
which I think helped reduce the tendency to talk loudly in public. And there were no TV’s, but
sometimes there was the low-level hum of background music that I think helped
perpetuate the quiet and the calm of the office.

Instead of individuals collectively occupying a room while
retaining their individual space and identity, and the freedom of choice for
quiet, to talk to someone, to read quietly, everyone was now subjected to the
same imposed noisy surroundings.
For those who immediately became accustomed to such waiting room
“entertainment”, it perpetuated a state of “brain death” that surrendered the
day passively and uneventfully while ostensibly being programmed by big brother,
moving from one TV screen to the next as the infection of TV monitors proliferated
to every conceivable space in ones life.
For those of us who eventually reacted to this, we were left prisoners with
no way out, as we unsuccessfully attempted to filter out the noise and light by
repositioning chairs, sitting as far away from the monitor as possible, talking
to a friend louder than the TV monitor, or filling your ears with some personal
music devise to drown out the unwelcomed ambient dissonance. At best, these prescriptions were only
partially successful. But at least
for the most part, people were left in the present.

Humans no longer wish to communicate looking at each other
and with their vocal cords. Maybe
humans will evolved in a few thousand years unable to speak……..hummmm, then I
can go back to my doctors office and not worry.
Anyway, for now……..I am on my way to get a hair trim. I love my Korean barber, whose shop is a
throwback from the 70’s, only two miles from my house, quiet, never filled to
the brim with patrons, equipped with a fresh newspaper to read, and happily not
sporting any common waiting room TV.
And at least at present, there are very few people young enough with good
enough eye sight to be able to read the small digital font of a PDA.
"WELL BEHAVED CHILDREN"
ReplyDeleteI have siblings you never told me about???
Good one, DJ!
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