books from Manifest Publications About Manifest Publications return to first page Links Send us mail! humorous articles by Virginia Cornell Press Information from Manifest Publications books from Manifest Publications
Manifest publications

Humor Column Archives



Quantifying the experience

Before I married an engineer I thought we would communicate in a common language - English. My student life in liberal arts taught me to make educated subjective judgments.

But my husband worked all of his life in the aerospace industry as a mechanical engineer. If you can't measure it - it doesn't exist. Furthermore, engineers don't care much for evocative language, but they do care about how they phrase things.

For example, there was the time that we brought our half-grown mutt home from the pound and named her Lola. Very soon we observed her in the act of defecation on the front lawn. I was madly searching for a euphemism, such as: "I believe our dog is relieving herself."

Matter of factly the husband observed, "We have a large bore dog!"

One evening, as we were watching TV, Lola was fast asleep on her pad. We heard a popping sound followed by a distinct aroma. As I groped for the right words; my husband said: "Her pressure valve just cracked," as if that explained everything. And so it did.

Engineers just love maps. My husband prefers navigation to driving. This is a good arrangement because most maps make about as much sense to me upside down as they do rightside up. But there's a downside to his focus.

"Hey, did you see that antelope?" I exclaimed as we drove through Chino Valley in Arizona. He missed it. Sometimes he gets so enthralled with a map that he forgets to look up and see the scenery. But I'm mighty glad to have him in the city. When we start out on foot he has figured where to go and with dead reckoning leads us through neighborhoods and alleys toward our goal.

The existential question of where he fits in the scheme of things never occurs to him. But boy, oh boy, did he ever get excited when he first learned about Global Positioning technology - GPS. He's suspicious of gadgets, but the idea of knowing - absolutely for sure - where he stood in the universe was more than he could resist.

If I comment, "I'm really suffering because it is so hot today," he will shoot back "Eighty-five degrees."

You see what I mean? He likes to quantify the experience.

I have discovered that engineers take standard pleasantries too literally. Take the simple phrase, "How are you?"

Most people understand this is uttered as standard social oil to grease the opening of conversation, not because the asker really wants to know how the askee truly feels. What ensues is generally, "Fine, thank you."

But engineers are serious people; accuracy is paramount. Why would you ask a silly question if you don't want it answered?

It was a red-lettered day when I brought home an easy-to-read battery-operated oral fever thermometer that didn't have to be shaken down every time it was used. When I asked, "How do you feel?" he shot back, "99.7" At first he was so enthralled with the thing that he made a chart to keep track of his recovery.

But the thrill of the thermomenter was topped by the arrival of a gizmo for taking blood-pressure. At last, he had a definitive answer to "How are you?"

"135 over 78," thank you.

He's just fine. Consider the experience has been quantified.

This copyrighted column is the intellectual property of Virginia Cornell.
For permission to reproduce it in part or in whole please contact: vcornell@manifestpub.com. Inquiries from newspapers and newsletters are welcomed.


Books | Press Room | Humor Column | Speaking | E-mail | Links | Home | About Us