“Look, the marshmallows aren’t even toasting! They remain a comfortable sixty-eight degrees!” – The Tick
Come on, we know that the real villain in Stranger Things™ should have been Stay Puft®.
Once upon a time when I was a five-year-old Wilder, my kindergarten teacher gave me a marshmallow. “Johnny, if you can wait five minutes before eating that marshmallow, I’ll give you a second marshmallow, and you can enjoy them both.” The teacher then walked out of the room, closing the door behind her.
I thought furiously. This must be some sort of trap, with stakes that high. I looked around for cameras. Aha! There they were, disguised cleverly as a new box of chalk and a pencil sharpener. They’re monitoring me, just as I suspected. Little did they know, I had anticipated this entire scenario when I had debriefed my friend Thomas A. Anderson* (known on the Dark Web® as Neo™) the previous day.
Also? Keanu never ages – he saves that for the picture in his attic. He looked the same in kindergarten as he does today.
With effort, I slowed the beating of my heart using a technique I had learned from Master Ginsu® during the years I had spent training in Tibet to be a Fake Purse Ninja©**. I had trained. I was ready for this.
Very slowly and subtly I pulled a second marshmallow from the front pocket of my Tough Skins® jeans from Sears©. I put it in my palm. Quick as a cobra, I then reached out for the marshmallow the teacher had left, but only appeared to leave it there on the plate. In reality, I had swapped out the marshmallow on the plate for the one I’d brought in my pocket.
In a practiced move, I pretended to pick my nose while in reality I was eating the marshmallow the teacher had left to tempt me, leaving the imposter I’d brought from home in its place. I felt the rush of the sugars dissolving in my mouth. Now I could finally understand what Spot was trying to tell Dick and Jane. The fools!
But I shook my head to clear it of these deep thoughts. I had finished my surreptitious swap just in time – I heard the footsteps in the hall outside the room, and saw the two dark shadows under the door, letting me know that the teacher was looming like a monster that had slowly slithered out of the bowels of the Earth and decided to go into elementary education. My heart, despite all of the training began to race again. The door knob turned.
Who knew it was that easy?
The teacher had another marshmallow, and started to place it next to my cleverly replaced fake. She stopped. She picked up my marshmallow, the one that had brought from home that had been sitting in my pocket for six hours before I made the swap, and studied it.
“Oh, Johnny. This is gross. There is lint in this marshmallow. And bits of string. And, is that a BB? This won’t do, this won’t do at all.” Drat. I never counted on the relative filth of my pockets giving me away.
I had been caught. I knew that this would go in my Permanent Record. Ruined! And all at the age of five. Perhaps I could salvage my defeat and defect to the Soviet Union so I could be closer to Bernie Sanders?
Before I could go to Plan B and steal an F-15E from the nearby airbase and leave the country at Mach 2.5 my teacher continued, “No, this won’t do at all. Let me get you a fresh marshmallow.” She left the room and came back with two clean, pristine, marshmallows.
It also felt like this when I swapped our baby for a baby with a better jawline at the hospital just after “Pugsley” was born. Those nurses hardly ever look away.
Success. And she never knew what hit her, which would make this the perfect crime. I ate the second and third marshmallows.
Maybe I overthink these situations?
Nah.
I left the school and then a helicopter exploded behind me as I got into the school bus for the trip home, because that just looks really cool. And I didn’t even look back.
Okay, absolutely none of that was true, except the exploding helicopter.
But what is true is that a Scientist did a study where they gave a four or five-year-old a marshmallow and promised them a second marshmallow if they didn’t eat the first. They then followed these kids for 40 years. Yes. 40 years. Here’s a (LINK). Turns out that those kids that waited for the second marshmallow had higher SAT scores, were skinnier, drank less, got stoned less, generally dealt well with stress and had a lot of friends.
The best way to win an argument with your wife is if it never happened. Enough vodka works, too. Does that make this the “Ketamine Maru” scenario?
To be clear: they never gave me the marshmallow test, because I would have completely Kobayashi Maru’d*** it. Besides, they were too busy taking knives away from me. Yes. In kindergarten. That’s how you spell freedom.
The concept of the marshmallow test is that the ability to delay gratification is good, and leads to better life outcomes. We see this all of the time – the ant and the grasshopper was a famous fable – the ants work all summer while the grasshopper goes to meth parties. Then winter hits, the ants start to party, but the grasshopper is left all tweaked out, tapping at the window of the anthill. The ant party then intensifies to drown out the tapping and then everyone cheers when the grasshopper finally shows the good sense to just die already.
Ahhh, Darwinian fables. They skipped over the part where the ants eat the grasshopper’s frozen corpse.
There is a balance that defines a struggle between now and the future. If you’re skewed too far to the now, you can certainly bet that all of your decisions will be made without regard to the consequences. I want the marshmallow now, dangit! The teacher might not bring me a second marshmallow. There might not even be a second marshmallow. Heck, the teacher might not even come back and I’ll be stuck in this room forever.
For most of my life, I’ve lived the “marshmallow later” life. I think the biggest example of this is that I buy life insurance. On my life. I use money that I could use to pay for buying a vintage Soviet T-34 tank (I found one for sale in Poland) and spend it on life insurance. Okay, $60 a month won’t buy a vintage Soviet T-34 tank from Poland, but you get the picture.
But for the rest of this post, I’ll use (sometimes) Marshmallow to refer to future orientation, and Anti-Marshmallow to refer to “eat it now” orientation.
It’s a project car, honey. The guy who sold it to me swore it was one owner.
Future orientation is spending money on something that pays off ONLY IF YOU ARE DEAD. You will never, ever in your life receive a dime from your own life insurance, unless you have a comically complicated plot to fake your own death. Yet, if you’re like me, you pay for it so your family can have the best tier of Internet service after you die, because after all, YouTube® isn’t going to watch itself. In my mind, life insurance is the ultimate Marshmallow test.
Preparing for disasters is another Marshmallow test (Be Prep-ared) that over 90% of your neighbors don’t do at all. Sticking to a diet is another (The Last Weight Loss Advice You’ll Ever Need, Plus a Girl in a Bikini Drinking Water) that’s not real popular. I will admit that I buy my share of silly crap on the Internet. I have several hobbies worth of kits and tools and stuff ready to build when I retire, and that’s Anti-Marshmallow behavior, but the only real hassle with them is finding a great place to store them until I’ve got the time to mess with them, what with the basement being full of ants, grasshoppers, and empty ketamine argument winning bottles.
A few weeks back I made a joke, “I could either spend it on me now, or spend it on an extra box of Depends® when I’m 90.” If one were to truly be Marshmallow, one would always pick the future comfort, over the comfort of today. But life is a balance. If all you do is pick the future, you become the janitor who worked 80 hour weeks for 80 years cleaning schools to leave Harvard® an extra $20 million to turn liberal rich kids into CNN® anchors.
If you become completely Anti-Marshmallow, well, you’re broke. Those are two extremes. Maybe this time you want Moderation?
Last week I mentioned that Moderation is for Monks, and Adam Piggott, Gentleman Adventurer added some great thoughts. You can read it here, and you should (LINK), in fact you should be reading him daily. Anyone who says, “Be the very best bastard that you can be,” is worth your time.
And he says moderation is good – moderation in having a cigar, and not the box. Splitting a bottle of wine with your wife on Friday, but not on all days ending in the letter y. And that’s Discipline, which is very Marshmallow. But is Discipline moderate in 2019 when the motto of the Western world is if it feels good, do it? Probably not.
But yet, there’s a time to be Marshmallow, and a time to be (at least a bit) Anti-Marshmallow. Maybe a T-34 is overkill – I don’t live anywhere near Kursk****. But maybe, just maybe, I should get a Ural®. The Mrs. has already signed off on it and said “You should get that. It looks cool.” To Marshmallow or to not to Marshmallow. I guess to be Marshmallow, at some point you have to eat the marshmallows. Otherwise Harvard© will.
I hear Elon Musk is including anti-gravity as a new Tesla® feature. If I bought a Ural®, I’d skip the Russians and the machine gun, because the Russians would drink all my booze and then invade Colorado only to be thrown back by a plucky school Spanish club.*****
Me? I don’t like marshmallows all that much. Except on ‘smores®. And then I roast mine slowly to get the full mushy goodness without it turning into something that looks like a cat caught at Hiroshima.
Which, I guess is the Marshmallow way to eat marshmallows.
*The Matrix. Too bad they never made a sequel to that movie.
**Bowfinger. If you haven’t seen it, you’re dead to me. Yes, it’s that funny.
***Star Trek II, The Wrath of Khan. Really? Please tell me you already knew this one.
****Sort of like Burning Man®, but for tanks. 1943.
*****Nope. You can figure this one out.