I worry about the Undecideds. Sure, they're all
the rage now, what with the media swarming around them like flies around a
day-old pastrami sandwich. But what's going to become of them once the election
is, uh, decided?
For a while I have to admit I was a little jealous
of the Uns. Had I known that all it would take to get my fifteen minutes of fame
was the inability to make up my mind, that's a path I would have chosen for
myself months ago. Or would I? See, there's the rub. If I were truly undecided,
could I make any life choices? Paper, plastic? Coffee, tea? Subprime mortgage,
financial solvency?
But now I realize that aspiring to be Joe the
Plumber or Sandy the Dog Groomer is as pointless as
aspiring to be one of Brad and Angelina's newly adopted children at the ripe age
of fifty-something. There isn't a question I've faced in the past five decades
that I didn't want to decide as quickly as possible. Sometimes this requires
enough research to make sure I understand the issue - like whether washing
dishes by hand or in the dishwasher will cause the polar bears to go extinct
more slowly. Other times, however, I'm not above making snap judgments - like
the first time Sarah Palin winked at me on television. Snap, that relationship
was SO over.
Being an Undecided may be all glitz and glamour
now, what with the catering trucks and make-up crew at their beck and call, but
in two weeks, these people will have to go back to their everyday lives, just
like the rest of us. Only they'll be the ones standing in line at the ATM for
thirty minutes trying to decide if they want $40 or $60 cash back. They're the
ones you'll see looking lost in thought at the produce section of the grocery
store, overwhelmed by the choice between Golden Delicious, Red Delicious,
MacIntosh, Braeburn, Gala, Gravenstein, Rome Beauty, and Fuji apples. Don't even
get them started on pears or lettuce. Meanwhile, their children will wander the
aisles, snacking on Count Chocula, and looking for someone more decisive to go
home with. Someone who knows when to pull into the line of oncoming traffic and
when to sit and wait - without a sign from god. The Uns will lie awake at night
because of their inability to choose between a Select Comfort or a Temperpedic
mattress. Instead, they'll toss and turn on the 23-year old box spring Aunt
Betty had until she passed away nine years ago.
So let them have their time in the limelight. It'll all be over soon.
Katie Couric and Charlie Gibson will pack up and go back to their desks, leaving
the Uns untethered, like red and blue balloons that have come untied and now
float aimlessly until they run into a pine tree or a cell phone tower. And in
the post-election world, while the rest of us walk up to the cashier and order
our cola with no ice and choose not to Supersize our fries, the Uns will stare
unfocused at the menu and smile sadly at the good old days when their lack of
resolve meant something.
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