A VERTICAL INTEGRITY
Philip
Brennan had been standing for over an hour in the company of most of the other
guests to a conference of senior Social Transcendentalists, held in the main
office of the party's Dublin headquarters, and was beginning to tire a little
on his feet, though not without a quiet satisfaction that he had so far avoided
the ignominy (as it was fast becoming known to those in the know) of taking a
seat in one of the few available upright chairs. Usually that ignominy was reserved for
females and youths, who were regarded as less qualified than men to spend long
periods of time in a vertical position.
Had the Leader not himself declined to sit down in order, no doubt, to
set an example to his followers? For,
assuredly, most of them were aware, by now, of his views on sitting, which he
regarded as a bourgeois habit unworthy of proletarian emulation; though he was
hardly a bona fide proletarian himself!
However, his views on sitting, as on lying and standing, were
representative of Social Transcendentalism, which sought and adhered to the
truth about everything, in the interests of evolutionary progress towards a
more absolute society.
For sitting was relative, a kind of
compromise between lying and standing, in which one part of the body, namely
the thighs, was horizontal whilst another part, namely the trunk and head, was
vertical, this in turn significant of a compromise between the feminine and the
masculine, the mundane and the transcendent.
For in case anyone had any doubts on the matter, the horizontal and the
feminine were aligned, and sharply contrasted with the vertical and the
masculine, which was how they would always remain.
But not for men, for a society dedicated,
more specifically, to revolutionary change in the name of masculine
progress! If the ancients, with
particular reference to the pagan Greeks and Romans, spent more time lying or,
rather, reclining than sitting or standing, that was because they were
essentially feminine in character, a people stemming from nature, like animals,
who also spend the greater part of their time - indeed almost all of it - in a
horizontal position. Not having attained
to a dualistic compromise, the ancients were content to spend most of their
time, days as well as nights, lolling about in pursuit of carnal
indulgence. When not dozing or sleeping,
they had been wolfing fruit, swilling wine, and philandering, not to say fornicating. They had even read scrolls and listened to
music in a reclining posture, as often as not dozing off in the process. So much for the ancients!
Fortunately, however, man went on to make
some progress during the succeeding centuries and, with the rise of bourgeois
consciousness, became less a reclining animal than a sitting one - indeed,
became properly human. No longer
absolutely feminine, and thus horizontal in his lifestyle, man developed a
dualistic compromise between the feminine and the masculine, a compromise
reflecting his religious progress towards the transcendent, which necessarily
acquired the form of a partly transcendental inclination, as germane to
Christianity, that anthropomorphic allegiance between Hell and Heaven, the
centrifugal alpha and the centripetal omega.
So now man, properly so-considered, was between the horizontal and the
vertical as he sat in his chair, one part of him seemingly stemming from the
natural and another part of him seemingly aspiring towards the supernatural. Of course, this development had passed
through a number of stages, from chairs with slanting backs to chairs the backs
of which were almost straight and, in some of the more up-to-date examples,
totally so. And, then, the amount of
time men had spent in their variously-constituted chairs varied with the
individual's social standing and the epoch in question, the European grand
bourgeoisie, nominally aristocratic, spending much less time seated than their
bureaucratic successors of more recent date.
However, this wasn't because they spent more time standing, but, as the
Leader was only too keen to remind us, because they remained enslaved, in
varying degrees, to pagan precedent - the early grand-bourgeoisie most
especially so! There were still too many
things which could be better done reclining than sitting, and we need not doubt
that the people in question had no qualms about thus doing them. So much for the medievalists!
When we come to the moderns, as the Leader
(having briefly drawn our attention to the bourgeoisie ... with their dualistic
compromise reflecting a lifestyle more balanced between horizontal and
vertical) referred to petty-bourgeois man, we arrive at a procedure the
converse of that favoured by the medievalists, with their grand-bourgeois
integrity. We note a gradual loosening
of the connection between men and chairs.
For even though the backs of modern chairs are usually vertical, there
is still a concession to the horizontal with the seat, and this concession,
though in many instances tempered by diagonally-slanting seats, is precisely
what, consciously or unconsciously, petty-bourgeois man happens to be in
rebellion against, if only relatively so and, hence, on a rather intermittent
basis. His extreme relativity favours
the vertical, so he inclines to spend more time standing than sitting, whereas
his class predecessor, the bourgeois, spent as much time sitting as both
reclining and standing - indeed, probably spent more time sitting, since that
would have accorded with a uniquely bourgeois compromise. Of course, one can divide the petty
bourgeoisie into early and late stages, thereby inferring two distinct classes,
and contend that if the late-stage petty-bourgeoisie preferred to spend more
time standing than sitting, then their immediate class predecessors probably
preferred to spend as much time as possible sitting with a straight back in the
straightest possible type of chair.
Moreover, one could argue that the grand bourgeoisie
...
No, rather than dwell on them, one would
do better to bear in mind the Leader's contention that proletarian man, that
successor to the moderns, should be prepared if not to completely avoid
sitting, during the barbarous phase of his society's evolution, then to
completely avoid doing so during the subsequent civilized phase, when all truck
with the relative, and hence the
horizontal, would be strictly taboo, man having become so masculine by
then as to be indisposed to any degree of compromise with the feminine, society
having become absolutely post-dualistic and thus exclusively orientated towards
the attainment of a supernatural goal.
Such was the absolute fate in store for proletarians in the civilized
phase of their transcendental society, as championed by Social
Transcendentalism in general but by the Leader in particular. In the meantime chairs, although not strictly
taboo, would remain discredited objects, things to which one could succumb in
the event of physical tiredness, albeit not without a degree of shame! Gone were the days when chairs could be
complacently accepted and utilized on an intermittent basis. The Leader had ensured that much!
Well, Philip was still feeling tired and
exposed, in consequence, to the temptation to slump into one of the nearby
upright chairs which stood against the wall to his right. These chairs assumed the appearance of
ignominious traps at such times, and one of them had already claimed a victim
in the form of a young female whose apparent nonchalance suggested the
probability that she was less well-informed than most as to the moral nature of
her behaviour! However, whilst a young
female of around twenty would have reasons of her own for sitting down, Philip
knew that, if he wanted to remain a candidate for promotion in the Leader's
eyes, he would do better to gently shift his weight from one leg to the other,
as though marking time.... This, to all appearances, was exactly what one or
two other comrades were already doing!
Meanwhile the Leader had taken centre
stage, so to speak, in order to address his followers about an innovation which
he hoped to introduce into meditation centres in due course. Clearing his throat with guttural relish, he
thus proceeded: "As you all know, the practice of meditation has
traditionally been carried-on while sitting cross-legged on the floor. Orientals have long maintained this practice
and, since the introduction of meditation-centred religion to the West, most
petty-bourgeois devotees of transcendentalism have likewise been content to sit
on the floor or, alternatively, on a bed or a chair. Now while this mundane habit may be
appropriate to Buddhism and other such traditional oriental religions,
reflecting the devotee's continuing allegiance to the Ground, that oriental
equivalent of the Creator, Social Transcendentalism couldn't possibly endorse
it, since we are dealing here not with a continuation of tradition but with a
total departure from it, as relevant to an absolutely post-atomic
integrity. Therefore we cannot meditate
while sitting on the floor, because such a mundane posture would connote with
Buddhist relativity, and we are beyond any such dualism. Neither can we meditate while sitting on a
chair, which, besides bringing us into contact with the floor, would impose a
degree of horizontality upon that part of the body resting on its seat, just as
the legs of those who sit cross-legged on the floor are far from being in a
vertical position. No, and neither can
we meditate while standing on our feet, since, besides tiring us, such a
posture would keep us anchored to the floor and detract, moreover, from our
commitment to meditation. So what should
we do? I'll tell you what! We must meditate suspended in a vertical
position a few feet above the ground, as though levitating, and thus free of
mundane allegiance. This is the only
acceptable posture for a Social Transcendentalist, and it will reflect an
absolutely free-electron status symptomatic of post-atomic civilization. So, clearly, we must design meditation
centres in such a way that people can be hoisted free of the floor when they're
due to meditate, a procedure requiring the installation of special
chest-to-crotch harnesses suspended from some scaffold-like apparatus under the
roof of the building which can be raised or lowered by remote control,
according to the demands of the occasion. Thus instead of squatting on the floor, like
primitives, those who practise meditation in our meditation centres will be
suspended from aloft in comfortable body harnesses that will enable them both
to forget about their body weight and to assume a more transcendent posture -
one relevant to the exclusive verticality of a proletarian civilization, beyond
all dualistic compromises."
Ah, how the phrase 'to forget about their
body weight' appealed to Philip Brennan at that moment, now that he had been
standing on his feet for over an hour-and-a-half! He was certainly unable to forget about his
own, or to completely detach his mind from the tempting proximity of those few
straight-backed chairs to his right, which made him slightly envious of the
seated young woman whose morals appeared to be less rigorously applied than his
own. If only such harnesses as the
Leader had spoken of were to be found in his office! But, of course, meditation and ideological
meetings were two entirely different things.
Perhaps, however, a day would eventually dawn when some scaffold-like
apparatus would be installed even for the latter, indeed for any meetings
between people, so that instead of standing on tired feet or succumbing to a
chair - that bourgeois anachronism - one would automatically step into a body
harness and be hoisted aloft, to conduct one's tête-à-tête, or whatever, in a
comfortably vertical position, a truly-civilized posture. Well, there was at any rate a degree of comfort
in the thought, and Philip Brennan needed all the comfort he could get, now
that the meeting was over and the Leader had left the office, presumably to
slump into a chair himself. It was at
least a relief for Philip Brennan to know that he was not the only one in need
of a seat at this moment!