Here comes Christmas, bounding over the
hilltops of the calendar weekends like an overexcited puppy. It’s
almost here, and ready to give you a big, wet lick in the face.
Christmas, that time nominally devoted
to giving, is really all about receiving. Receiving presents? Well,
okay... sure, there are presents.. but those presents kind of lost
their significance back when you realised that the best presents from
now on were going to come from Uncle Amazon, and can be received all
year round.
I’m talking more about the other
things. Like receiving two bouts of flu perfectly timed to interfere
first with your holiday and then with your return to work. Receiving
the slap in the face that you skilfully dodged by ignoring you
birthday, when you realise that 5 years have passed since 5 years
ago.
But above all receiving wisdom, and
reinforcing those Received Wisdoms that you carry around throughout
the year.
Unlike the type of knowledge which is built over
time, with careful careful consideration and continual readjustment, Received
Wisdom comes in easy-to-digest, pre-thought-out packaging. It
promises the bearer an instant air of well-informed assurance which
is inherently more appealing than the vague uncertainties that make
more accurate facts.
Like last Christmas for instance.
We’re all sat around the dinner table
and cousin Alice, who turned 9 in October, looks suspiciously at her
alcohol-free mulled wine.
“Alice”, warns her father, Uncle
Gordon.
“um please?” adds Alice quickly.
“Try your mulled wine.” he says.
“Coke’s not very christmassy, and you have it all the time.”
He hastens to add, “well, only on
special occasions”, for fear that we might think him a bad parent
who fills his children with soft drinks.
“No it’s fine.” says my mother,
“she can have a Coke.”
“You know,” says my father, leaning
back and positioning himself for a story. “Santa Claus was created
by Coca Cola.”
The four children’s eyes widen, the
older one suddenly excited that The Secret might at last be coming
out into the open.
“Yes.” says dad. “It’s true. Of
course Santa Claus has been around for a lot longer than Coca Cola.”
For the benefit of the younger children
he adds “Santa’s always been there... living in the North Pole.
But before the 1950s Santa Claus wore green and he was called St
Nicolas. You see after the war there was a big depression and people
didn’t want to drink Coca Cola, particularly in Europe.”
He looks pointedly at my Aunt, who is
half American, as if to say “we’re healthy in Europe.”
“And then of course,” he continues,
serving himself another helping of sugar-loaded sticky pudding, “Coca
Cola needed some way to boost sales, so the marketing guys and artist
called... erm Sunbloom somebody.. came up with the clever idea that
they should make Santa wear red and white, like the Coca Cola logo
you see.”
He points at the bottle of Coke that my
mum has brought through from the kitchen.
“Then, of course, they made a big
thing of Santa giving presents to take peoples’ minds off the
depression.”
He shovels a spoonful of pudding into
his mouth.
“It’s all marketing.” he says,
and we all nod wisely.
“It’s true” says mum, “He wore
green before Coca Cola.”
And she pours a glass for Alice, and
the Received Wisdom is passed down another generation.
Now, I’m not going to go into the
details (although I highly recommend the write-up on Snopes) but
suffice to say that Coca Cola did not clothe Santa Claus. Santa had
already been “standardised” as a fat man wearing red with white
whiskers and a sack full of toys for some time before their seminal
advertising campaign (which incidentally was run in 1931, a full 8
years before the war even started) and drawings depicting him exactly
as we know him now can be found at least as far back as 1881.
But Received Wisdom is like that. It’s
less the like the received gift of an unwanted jumper (or Uncle
Gordon’s racist views of Polish plumbers) which can be actively
rejected with a mental note never to wear them. It’s more like the
endless offerings of mince pies and marzipan - although you may try
to turn a few of them down, you still leave Christmas a full 2 inches
wider than when you arrived, and find yourself quoting with certainty
the “fact” that turkey contains a chemical which sends people to
sleep.
In essence, such “facts” are
usually little more than opinion as designed by Chinese whispers, and
as such are a cultural and social necessity. Opinions are like the
flu - don’t let on that you’re the only person without one, or
everybody will come and take turns to sneeze on you.
Unfortunately, there’s no vaccination
against spurious Received Wisdom but its effect can be reduced with
regular mental exercise and by paying a little bit of healthy
attention to how you consume such information.
Receiving wisdom with the phrase “could
be” or “hmm.. maybe.” is generally a better response than “wow
that’s amazing. I didn’t know that.”, not because it will
affect the speaker (after all, their brain is not your concern) but
because it will remind you that the information you are putting into
your memory is not gospel.
If you are worried about causing
offence a simple “I’ve not heard that before” is also a good
option. In the cases that you have heard it before, then saying
exactly that (i.e. “Hmm. Yes. I’ve heard that”) is better than
replying “Yes it’s true.”
After all, repeatedly woven lies are
still lies. It’s just the more times they’re woven, the harder it
is to unpick them later on.
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