I consider myself lucky that I
discovered everything I knew about life and the physical universe was
wrong. Lucky not only because of the discovery, but also because I was
young when the revelation occurred. Had I been older I would have rejected
it as nonsense. Music, attitude, and your
point of view can change things beyond belief. An energy, a positive
force, can be generated. Magic can be
done. Listen to
this! There was a computer store in
Cameron Cove, California --- part of a major chain --- that had a golden
year. It became a sort of Camelot. Through the random processes of
physics, the right elements just happened to fall in place at the right
time. Remember, given enough time the unlikely will
occur. At the time I was hired, there
were four others working there: Janet,
the receptionist --- a bright, cheerful mother who's kids had grown old
enough for her to go back to work. That she needed the extra money was
beside the point . . . she wanted to go back to work, she
was happy about it. There was Nick, the
manager --- an optimistic ex-used car salesman from New Jersey. He was a
friendly, generous person. Easy-going. Definitely not the management
type. There was also Bob, a slick,
go-for-the-throat salesman with the remarkable ability of not being
sleazy. He was just doing it to work his way through college. It wasn't
his life, so he wasn't bitter about
it. Now Steve, he could have been my
brother. We even looked alike. Same hair, same beard, except that he had
brown hair and I have red. He was a salesman too, but he was the nice-guy
type who relied on the customers who liked to do business with
him. Now here were the elements: Janet,
Nick, Bob and Steve. And myself. And
music. It started with the music. Nick
liked music, and we always had the stereo pumping the B-52's or the
Talking Heads through the store's sound system. Living, jumping
music, full of positive energy. Janet had
never really heard these groups before, and she would smile when we played
them. "I like this!" she'd say. "Who is this?" She said this
all the time, with each new group we introduced to the
store. When I first came to work there
was a mountain of dead computers to fix, a really bad back load of work
left over from my predecessor --- a negative person, from what I'd heard
about him. A real ogre. Hated customers, hated fellow employees, loved
only his computer --- and only his computer. He now makes six
figures programming for the Department of Defense. You know --- space
based weapon systems? So all these inert,
dead computers he left behind had owners who needed them back. Needed them
living, working, running their businesses and doing their taxes.
Entertaining their children. And they would call everyday, begging for
their machines back. Screaming at me! Calling me names! Sucking away all
my positive energy and leaving me dry like a sack of old
sticks. When the music played, however,
it was different. Music made things flow. Music lubricated things, eased
frictions, speeded work. I started catching
up. Janet would walk into the tech room
every once in a while just to watch and smile. Nick would wander back to
get away from the pressures of his job, and stand there listening to the
music. His feet would start tapping, then his head would sway. At one
point he began to mimic playing the drums. When Steve saw this, he came
back and began playing the "air guitar" --- unlike myself, these guys both
had musical backgrounds --- so "air guitars," "air drums," and jam
sessions were part of their everyday lives. It was inevitable. Inevitable!
Steve and Nick jamming, and I'd start to dance. Janet laughed, thinking
this was the greatest thing she'd ever seen, and I said, "Come on! Dance
with me!" "You guys are
crazy!" "Come
on!" Her grin straightened out. She
thought a moment. Then she let go and we were dancing, dancing, bodies
gyrating to that spring-gone-haywire beat, bouncing and jumping and
laughing about it all. Steve playing that phantom guitar, Nick slamming
out that beat on the tech bench with pencils. Bob, hearing all the
laughter, excused himself from a customer and came back to see what was
happening. His face lit up like a sunny day at the beach. "Yes!" he said.
"Yes! I like it! I like working here." He went back to the sales
floor and sold a big, fat computer
system. It was energy we were generating,
living positive energy. It flowed out of that tech room and filled the
whole store. The building vibrated with it. It was alive,
living. Now, computers are neutral
things. Not living yet not dead, not smart but full of thought. Not its
own thoughts --- our thoughts. The thoughts of the user and the
thoughts of the programmer. So, depending on who is using it and what
program it's running, a computer can become positive or
negative. Over the hours and days of good
feelings and good times, the positive energy in that tech room became so
intense I could feel it like heat. While the music played and my friends
were happy, I worked on those poor, sick, dead computers . . . I
felt the energy flowing down my arms, through my hands, and into what I
was doing. Spare parts were becoming more and more unnecessary. Things, in
their odd electronic ways, were beginning to simply
heal. Nick noticed this first. He wanted
to know why my tech room was suddenly so much more profitable. "I'm fixing
the boards," I told him, "instead of replacing
them." "You can do
that?" "Yeah!" He
smiled and nodded. Things were looking up. Sales had climbed to an
all-time high as well. "Maybe," he said, "maybe we should cut the repair
prices down. Do ya think?" "It wouldn't
hurt us," I told him. "I want to do
that," he said. "That'll really make our customer's happy, wouldn't
it?" "Sure." "Okay.
Do it. Start giving them a break." He was happy. He was being nice, and it
felt good --- especially since he didn't have to be nice. It
irritated him when he had to be nice, but when it was of his own
free will, of the genuine goodness of his heart, it felt great. It pumped
the positive energy up another notch in the store, as
well. He was right, too --- the customers
were happy. Mr. John P. Galmore had been quoted $350 for his IBM
repair, and we only charged him $220. Wayne Trapper thought it was going
to be $175 to get his laptop back, but it only cost him $90. Little Jimmy
Malcot got his Macintosh repaired for only $25 instead of $110. Nick even
gave him some games for free. Two weeks
later Jimmy's father came in --- Mr. Malcot of Malcot Industries --- and
bought $350,000 worth of equipment. He did this because of what we had
done for his son. Nick was ecstatic! What we were doing was paying off.
Everyone was winning. Everyone felt
good! We had a little party one day after
work, celebrating yet another record breaking month. During the party an
old man in a sports jacket banged on the front door even though the store
was obviously closed. He looked through the window at us with a desperate
expression. Nick let him in. "I'm a
writer," the man said to Nick. "The only copy of my novel is on this
computer, and the computer stopped
working." Nick swore to himself. "If
there's something wrong with your hard drive," Nick told the writer, "your
novel may be gone. And when it's gone, it's
gone." The writer looked stricken. "It's
the only copy I have." Now Nick was
gritting his teeth and frowning. This sounded like a really bad scene.
"You didn't print any of it out or
anything?" "No." The man was on the verge
of tears. "I've been working on it for four years. Nothing like this has
ever happened." "Well, we'll get our tech
working on it," Nick said. "I can't promise anything, but if anyone can
save your novel, he can." We put it on my
work bench and plugged it in. Turned it on. There was a humming sound, and
garbage --- looking a lot like Egyptian hieroglyphics --- filled the
screen. "It's trying to boot," I said, "but either the main board is
damaged or there's scrambled data on the hard
drive." "Oh," Nick said. Everyone had
grim expressions. I tried another test with a floppy disk. The computer
started and ran through its paces, but as soon as I tried to access the
hard drive it came to a halt. More garbage filled the screen. "The trouble
is in the hard drive, all right," I
said. More grim faces. The novelist
looked like someone had just shot his dog to death. "Oh," is all he could
say. "How long have you been working on
this novel?" I asked. "Years," he
said. "Years?" "Years
and years." His voice was barren and
hollow. I looked at everyone in the room.
I looked at Janet. "We need to turn on the
music." "At a time like this?" Steve
said. "Yes. Especially at a time like
this." Bob had a gleam in his eyes. He
half-grinned, like he had a secret. I believe he had an inkling of what I
had in mind. Bob went and turned up the stereo, putting on a B-52's
album. "Let's go down to the looooove shack!" shouted the
speakers. "Love shack, yeahhh!" I started
dancing. Janet, looking a little perplexed, started dancing with me.
Positive energy, I thought. Let me feel it. Let me absorb the music, the
dancing. Flow . . . flow . . . warm music, warm
dancing. Warm feelings. Even the novelist was smiling. Janet and I gyrated
together, generating that energy. Nick tapped on a monitor with a pen,
helping the rhythm with a staccato clack clack CLACK! Steve shook his
head, saying, "You guys are nuts," but he wasn't disapproving --- he
wanted to see something happen. He wanted a
miracle. I felt it growing in me,
blossoming. The power was in my arms, in my hands --- they felt like they
would glow in the dark. Still rocking with the beat, I danced to the work
bench and held onto that computer, held it tight, flooding it. When the
moment felt right, I turned it on. It
came up without a glitch. The novel was
there. From that point on it seemed there
would be no stopping us. Business kept growing, mainly because people felt
good as soon as they entered the store. Nick felt good and he kept on
slashing the prices. I performed miracle after miracle on the tech bench,
resurrecting data from the dead, healing ill IC chips, brightening lost
CRT's. It was a cold November day when a
college professor brought in an old Apple III CPU, a model that hadn't
sold well and was actually quite rare. He'd just walked in and I happened
to be out front, and I said, "Let me take that for you." He handed it to
me, and I felt the tired old circuits, poorly designed and hastily built.
This was more factory defect than breakdown, but the user apparently never
knew there was something wrong with it until it quit altogether. The
moment I touched it the energy flowed, and by the time I set it down it
was fixed. "Let's plug it in and see
what's up," I said. "It doesn't work at
all." "We've got to start
somewhere." "Now wait, how much is this
going to cost?" "It used to be sixty-five
an hour, but for you I'll only charge
twenty-five." "Why?" he
asked. "Why
what?" "Why do I get a lower
price?" "Because . . ." I
looked around, thinking up a reason. "Because we give everyone with
orphaned computers a break." "What do you
mean, 'orphaned' computer?" "That's the
term for a computer model abandoned by its
manufacturer." "This model was
abandoned?" "Yes sir, I'm afraid so.
Quite a while ago." He was upset at this
news. "Well then, what's the point in fixing
it?" "A working computer is better than a
dead computer." "A worthless computer is
worthless if it's working or not." "It's
not worthless if it does what you need it to
do." "It's never done what I need it to
do!" Whew! The negative energy billowed
out of this man like an explosion of thick, black smoke. It was creating a
hole in the positive energy in the store. I'm treading on eggs here, I
thought. "What do you need it to do?" I asked. "Perhaps I can help
you." The man blustered and turned red.
"It doesn't work!" he shouted. "Well,
I'll fix it, then we'll get it to do what you want it to
do." "I want it to
work!" Almost all the positive energy in
the room was gone. A horrible development! I conjured all the positive
energy I had stored up in my body and levitated the professor's computer
through the air and into his hands. He grasped it,
astonished. "It's fixed," I told him. "It
will now work better than it ever had. It will function perfectly." I
smiled, using my last few drops of warmth. "No
charge." "Preposterous!" the man yelled,
throwing the machine down onto the floor between us. He turned and took
leaping strides out of the store, slamming the glass doors open and
high-stepping to his gray BMW. It looked like he was trying to climb steps
into the air. Steve walked to the front
and stood with me as the car left the parking lot with tire-squealing
sounds. "Wow. I don't think you should have pulled the levitating
trick." "I guess
not." "Looks like he overloaded and
locked
up." "Yeah." "Total
systems crash." "Massive parity
errors." "To the
max." We picked up the pieces of the
twice-abandoned Apple and took it back to the tech room. It took 3 days to
recharge the store to its former level of positive energy. By the end of
those 3 days I had the professor's computer repaired again, but this time
it had taken manual board swapping and spare parts. The professor hadn't
left a name or number for us to reach him --- in fact, we didn't find out
he was a professor until a few days later when the corporate headquarters
gave Nick a call. After the call, Nick came back to talk to
me. "That guy called corporate and
complained." "You're
kidding!" "He told them you threw his
computer at him." "No! You're kidding!
You're kidding!" Nick shook his
head. "His name is Screwtack, he teaches at the
University." "Oh no!" I was terrified.
"You set corporate straight, I hope! I mean, Steve is my
witness." "Yeah, yeah, I told them all
that. But they're sending someone down from corp to check us
out." I shrugged. "That can't be
bad." "Naw. Don't worry about it." He
laughed. "Business as usual . . . except, don't go levitating
anything in front of him." "No
levitating," I said. "I promise." An
unnecessary promise. When the corporate man, Denny, walked into the store
he sucked so much of the positive energy away that I could barely work,
let alone defy the laws of gravity. The man had such a negative charge he
was like an energy hole. The magic drained away in a tearing, silent
vortex, spinning into a sad, mortal
oblivion. "Do you always play this music
in the store during business hours?" he asked
Nick. "Yeah. It makes a good working
environment----" "Well, that stops right
now. This type of music is against corporate policy." Denny peered around
with cold, narrow eyes. "We have corporate tapes with encoded subliminal
messages that you're supposed to be playing." He looked directly into
Nick's eyes, making Nick balk and inch backward. "They encourage customers
to spend recklessly and to prevent employee
theft." "I don't really think
we----" "You're not paid to think, only
to sell." Cold, cold, cold! Pointy nose, beady eyes. Perfect,
stiff, unwrinkled black suit. "Your prices are far below the
standard." "Our sales and gross income
have tripled in the last nine
months." "So what. These prices are too
low. Use your salesmanship, not sacrifice profit margins. Where's
your technician?" "He's in the
back." I of course was listening in, and
had to scramble unseen into the back for them to find me. "You've
practically stopped ordering parts," he said to me. No hello, no
introduction, or anything. Just blurted out those words, like an
accusation of a crime. "I fix the boards
in-store," I told him. "Component level
repair is against corporate
policy." "Look at my profit
margin." "I've seen it. I've also seen
that you've cut the hourly service
charge." I glanced at Nick and back.
"We're building a large and very loyal customer base," I told him
reasonably. "Your profit margin could be
three times as high. From now on, your rate is back up at corporate's
standard sixty-five an hour." "Whatever
you say." "And no more component level
repairs. Our studies have shown it as a waste of time and
energy." Suck! Suck! He was sucking away
at the magic in the tech room. He was an animated karma vacuum. His cold
eyes scanned my equipment and the few computers I still had in for repair.
He passed right by the resurrected Apple orphan and zoomed in on my
portable stereo. "No music in the tech room," he
said. "What?" This was too
much! "You have a problem with
that?" "No. You do. I have it in my
contract that I get music of my choice in the tech room. And no earphones,
either --- I get to play it out
loud." "What
contract?" I pulled it out of my file
cabinet, waved it defiantly in the man's face. He'd sucked all my positive
energy away, leaving me in the negative myself. I was ready for a
fight. Instead of debating it, he turned
on Nick. "You entered an employee into a
contract?" "Yes." "That
was pretty irresponsible." "I don't think
so," Nick said. He was ready to fight too. "I don't know where you come
off stepping in here and turning everything upside-down. I'm running a
very successful store here, and I'm running it my
way." "You're running it against
corporate policy." "Yeah, well, whatever
works. My figures don't lie. Hey, I don't see many of the other stores
turning the business like this
one." "This store does not belong to you.
You're just an employee here." "Yeah,
well, this employee is doing a damn good job if I say so myself. I'll
leave before I ruin my business by adopting your greedy, short-sighted
policies." Nick was given his final check
that very week. Denny himself moved in to manage the store. He tore up my
contract in my presence, with Bob, Steve, and Janet watching. "If you
don't like it, sue me." During the next
few days, Janet and I tried generating positive energy for repairs by
chanting the lyrics to our favorite songs. We had a limited success, but
then Janet was chewed out and banned from the tech room for "spending too
much time chattering." After work,
sometimes Bob, Steve, Janet and I --- all with our collective spouses,
Significant Others, and children --- would meet at a little ocean-side
pizza place and try to figure out a way to recapture the magic, despite
Denny's negative presence. Angry, negative-energy plans were rejected, and
all our positive energy plans
failed. Negative energy, it seems, is
always stronger than positive energy. Possibly because positive energy has
to be generated and exists in limited amounts, while negative energy is as
vast and limitless as the universe itself. It's easy to be negative. It
takes effort to be positive. And when positive meets negative the positive
drains away. It seems the negative
usually wins. Just look at the
world. We finally figured that the only
way to beat the negative is to avoid it, so as a group we all resigned
from the store --- and, with sadness, went our separate ways. It didn't
matter in the least to Denny, he simply hired more and continued
on. The moral? I don't know. Just
generate as much positive energy you can, share it with those you love,
and never, never levitate someone's computer unless you know them
very well.
Submission
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