Work Well With Others
Take a wooden matchstick and slice a thin sliver from one side. Then cut the
remaining stick in two, lengthwise. Make sure you leave a little of the red
tip intact for effect. Discard one half.
Make the aircraft by gluing the sliver of wood - the wing - across the
remaining part of the matchstick - the fuselage. If you want, you can use
little scraps to make a tail section. Or you can make a biplane. Or you can
use a couple of thin slices of balsa to make a huge wing, one that will carry
maybe twenty engines. Indulge your aeronautical whims. Think of lift, think
of thrust, think of innovation without the benefit of an industrial policy.
Catch a bunch of flies. Put them in a jar and put the jar in the freezer. In
a few seconds the flies will be chilled out completely. This is called
cryogenics, and it has its drawbacks. For example, the flies will be dead
flies if you freeze them too long. Dead flies are no good. So if you're a
tinkerer, refrigerate your flies. It takes longer to make them comatose, butthey have a higher recovery rate than the ones you leave in the freezer next
to the burritos.
Meanwhile, put a tiny drop of rubber cement at each place along the wing
where you want an engine.
Take the flies out of the freezer. Attach the abdomen of one frigid fly to
each drop of glue. Make sure all the flies are facing the same direction.
Breathe life into the flies. A miracle: A gentle puff of your warm breath
will resuscitate the flies.
Launch the aircraft. It should fly like a charm, and, far from being cruel
to the flies, you'll be teaching them a new and valuable thing, one that
brings us to the virtue of this exercise. For we see that while flies think
a lot alike, have a great deal in common, share many of the same hopes and
dreams, they never act in concert, as a team, with regard for the worth of
other, neighboring flies until forced to by grim circumstance - as, for
example, when they are harnessed to fly and either first experience the
exhilaration of high-altitude cooperation or die. Redeemed by such a
critical choice, they'll soar like a glider, race like a Stealth, and, when
overflying a barnyard or kennel, turn into a Neat-O dive bomber.