Passion by proxy
Out of touch with your emotions? Buy someone else's. A user's guide to the sentiment market.
by Ellen Barry
It isn't always easy to say what you feel. I tried it once, and it turned out
badly; human interaction carries with it multiple risks, among them stage
fright, misdirected spittle, and the terrible possibility of rejection. And
there's always the danger that your feelings are not the correct ones -- who
knows, really, until the dishes are already flying? Celebrities don't have to
deal with this. When Bill Clinton has an upwelling of sentiment, do you think
he sits up all night trying to verbalize? Forget about it. He calls a
speechwriter. Someone gets him rewrite. The really famous people don't even
have to write their own memoirs.
And neither, dear reader, should you. The same inventive nation that brought
us the EZ-CD(TM) CD opener and the Taco-Prop(TM) offers a range of reasonably
priced proxies -- professional writers trained to express feelings that are
ready-to-use and guaranteed appropriate. Our research has unearthed an
encyclopedia of proxy options: ready-made poison pen letters, a Somerville
couple who market themselves as complainers-for-hire, and a book of 850 letters
prewritten for a variety of obscure interpersonal situations. Then there's
Hallmark, compensating for emotional sclerosis since 1910. If you won't do it
for yourself, consider your audience; do you really think they want to peer
into your amateur soul? What follows is a user's guide to letter-writing
services. No assembly required.
Sentiment: Fond
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Proxy option: Hallmark
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Price: $2.25 per card
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Availability: Drugstore
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It's hard to say "I'm sorry." Don't bother. For $2.25 you can pick up a card
already embossed with the following:
Sometimes I wonder
how you put up with me,
especially the way
I've been lately.
It seems every time
I turn around,
I'm either saying or doing
something I shouldn't,
or apologizing for it.
I'm not going to give you
an excuse for my behavior
because there isn't any.
That's just an excerpt. "A manager of one of our card lines once
put it this way to me, and I've never forgotten it," says Rachel Bolton, a
Hallmark spokeswoman. "`The more difficult a situation is, the more people turn
to Hallmark for the words.'"
That explains the success of the "Between You and Me" line, which could
more accurately be known as "Between You and Me and the Paid Professional Who
Wrote This Letter." This line is to the traditional greeting card what couples
therapy is to the dinner date, and reflects what Bolton calls "one of the major
trends that we're seeing in cards": namely, the substitution of casual speech
for formalized verses. From a greeting-card standpoint, it's all part of the
march of history.
"Something happened historically in our society, if you're aware," she
says. "Back in the '70s there was an upheaval. There was a free speech movement
-- burn your bra, don't trust anyone over 30. And really, when you come down to
it, that was about breaking down communication barriers. A new value has been
placed on open communication."
So now, instead of "Thinking of You," you send a card that says "Son, I
find myself wondering if you're lonely, or tired, or getting enough to eat," or
"We haven't been able to coordinate our schedules and actually get together for
a while now, and I just wanted you to know that I really miss seeing you." The
seven-year-old "Between You and Me" line has anticipated 130 different
emotional contingencies, and Bolton has come to the conclusion -- which can be
seen as either uplifting or depressing -- that "when it comes down to the
crunch, we're all very much alike." Nevertheless, some of the cards anticipate
extraordinarily complex relationship situations:
I know
you aren't really my child,
but sometimes
I don't think
I could love you any more --
or be any prouder of you --
even if you were.
You're really a great person
and someone very dear to me,
someone I feel closer and closer
to all the time.
You're such
an important part
of the family,
such a special part
of my life.
Apart from the mesmerizing possibilities for abuse (say, for instance,
you received this card from your father) is the dilemma of what to write at the
bottom of this card, besides your name. "I know/you aren't really my child,/but
sometimes/I don't think/I could love you any more --/or be any prouder of you
--/even if you were./You're really a great person/and someone very dear to
me,/someone I feel closer and closer/to all the time./You're such/an important
part/of the family,/such a special part/of my life" really says it all.
Sentiment: Various
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Proxy option: Lifetime Encyclopedia of Letters,
by Howard Meyer, Prentice Hall
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Price: $34.95
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Availability: Contact Prentice Hall in Paramus,
New Jersey. Examine for 30 days absolutely free.
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If humans make you nervous, this book is for you. Prentice Hall's 1992
Lifetime Encyclopedia of Letters contains 850 ready-made letters,
including -- but not limited to -- such obscure epistolary specimens as the
"Compliment for Better Truck Loading," "Complaint about Noisy Driver," "Apology
for Confusing Word Usage," "Returning a Gift Because It Is Too Valuable" and
the haunting "Reprimand for Lack of Cleanliness," which reads, in its
entirety:
Dear Betty,
You have a lot of good friends here. We all like your smile and your cheery
greeting in the mornings. There is one area, however, in which we feel there is
room for improvement. We would like to suggest a stronger deodorant and perhaps
more frequent washing of your blouses. You no doubt have been unaware of this
need, but your co-workers would appreciate your considering the problem.
Keep smiling and please hold on to your cheerful ways.
Perhaps the most disturbing entries are notes of condolence, including
one expressing sympathy for the simultaneous death of a son and loss of a
business in a tornado. Meyer -- who, his biography says, has had a "lifelong
passion for words and the shades of meaning they convey" -- handles it this
way: "We'll gladly extend any length of credit necessary. Will you let us do
that much for you?"
Mr. Meyer helpfully warns the writer not to "burden the grief-stricken with
more grief or long explanations of unrelated matters," and recommends, somewhat
paradoxically, that the letters "be written from the heart." Among the
heartfelt letters prewritten for your convenience are "Sympathy for Birth
Defect," "Condolence for Personal Reverses" and "Condolence for Unnamed
Tragedy," which is horrifying in its lack of specificity.
Dear Mr. and Mrs. Alder,
I saw the report in the paper about Jim, and want to tell you how sorry I
am. Jim was three years younger than I, so we didn't play together often as
kids. But when I met him at your daughter's wedding last month, I realized what
a fine son you have and how proud you must be of him. You'll just have to take
my word for how badly I feel.
Reading this well-phrased letter, one cannot help wondering: what state
could "Jim" be in to inspire this frightening, analgesic note? Equally creepy
is the possibility that at some point, in the distant past or unthinkable
future, one of these letters will be addressed to you. The "Condolence for
Personal Reverses," maybe?
Dear Ben,
A stone wall may be all you see now, but out of your adversity I know your
tenacious courage will find a gateway opening once again to the success you
have achieved before.
How could you respond except in kind?
Dear Joan,
Thank you so much for your thoughtfulness in sending me the beautiful dwarf
pine. I appreciate your caring.
Sentiment: Irate
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Proxy option: Complain to Us, Inc.
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Price: $25 per complaint
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Availability: 1-888-479-9300
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Anyone who has ever lost pants to a feckless dry-cleaner knows that the irate
letter is a rhetorical tightrope. The emotion that brings it into being --
namely, uncontrollable anger -- is the very quality that can soften it into an
incoherent rant.
From their apartment in Somerville, where they have founded the world's
first-ever freelance complaint service, entrepreneurs Gary and Sandy Rattigan
are ready to be the tools of your anger. For $25, they'll take your grievance
to its fullest nonlitigative conclusion.
"We'll throw a tantrum for you," says Gary Rattigan, who came up with the
concept through a combination of careful study and -- predictably -- pent-up
consumer outrage brought on by the early collapse of a step machine. Among
other things.
"This sounds small," says Sandy Rattigan, "but you know when you're in the
supermarket and you just sat there for 20 minutes picking out some nice, good
fruit, and there it goes, thrown on the other end of the cart?"
"You get your fruit bashed, or you get your chips bashed," continues her
husband. "I always go through all the chips and say `That's a good bag, that's
not a good bag,' and then they go bang! bang! They keep them separate,
so they can put it in its own bag, and then they'll throw it against that
plastic screen. So by the end, they've hit it three times. Now, that's not $25
worth of chips, but over time, it adds up, and at some point you've gotta go,
`Look, I have to get another bag of chips now,' and you ask to see the manager.
And you're made to look like the bad guy."
It's this kind of attention to detail that qualifies the Rattigans --
who work, when they're not complaining, as an artist and a collections agent --
to complain in your place. Complain to Us, which opened for business in late
September, works this way: once you make your demand clear, Gary and Sandy will
find the right person to write to, then draft their specially formulated letter
-- irate enough to compel response without culminating in a restraining order.
Once the Rattigans take on a case, Complain to Us guarantees results.
Even if you decide not to commit the $25, Complain to Us advises strongly
against the undisciplined complaint, which tends to dissolve into an endless
series of mania-inducing phone transfers. Sandy Rattigan knows what's happening
on the other end of that phone, and it will confirm every paranoid suspicion
you ever had: just when you think the phone on the big desk is ringing, the
agents of corporate deflection take their last, most brutally efficient step.
"There are lines that don't connect to anything. There's no phone ringing
there. They just call it `space,' " says Sandy Rattigan. "They'll say,
`Send 'em to space.' "
Sentiment: Hostile
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Proxy option: Poison Pen Letters, by Keith
Wade, Loompanics Press
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Price: $12.95
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Availability: Through Loompanics. For credit card
orders, call 1-800-380-2230. Note legal warning, below.
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There is, of course, an emotional zone where Hallmark may cease to be
appropriate, Harold Meyer has not anticipated a need, and the Rattigans may
shrink from prosecutable crime. For those situations there is Poison Pen
Letters, a compilation of fraudulent letters guaranteed to wreck the lives
of their addressees. Keith Wade, who wrote the book, warns his readers to
a) mail the letters through a "remailer," assuring that it is
untraceable, and b) wear gloves when handling the letter so as to avoid
leaving fingerprints.
The above suggests -- and the Postal Inspection Service will confirm -- that
this type of epistolary self-expression is illegal, pursuant to statute
18, chapter 3714 of the US Criminal Code. Merely using a false name and address
for malicious purposes can get you a maximum sentence of five years per letter,
which, if you began to test the limits of Mr. Wade's book, could mean some
serious time.
With that said, Poison Pen Letters contains some truly spellbinding
sabotage options, with intended results that range from mild discomfort to
scorched earth. One letter -- which is to be forwarded to local news or TV
stations and widely publicized -- has a bookstore (the mark) pledging
extravagant donations of merchandise to a literacy fund. Another -- supposedly
from a campus newspaper (the mark) -- asks highly-placed administrative
officials to respond to an extensive questionnaire for an investigative article
about the health hazards of chalk.
Then there's this one, which targets a minister:
Mr. Mark Coreless VI
Publisher
Gay Women in Love
925 SW 78th St.
Washington, DC 20324
Dear Mr. Coreless,
I do not approve of pornography. I feel that it goes against God's laws. I
do not feel, however, that your work, Gay Women in Love, is
pornography.
Rather, I feel that it acts as an informational tool. It is well written,
and well illustrated. . . . Do not feel that the religious world
is against you. We are against pornographers. Your magazine is a public
service, and I shall continue to recommend it to those with questions.
May God bless you.
Sincerely yours,
The Reverend Irvin Kontos
[Note: This letter will almost certainly be printed in the next issue of
Gay Women in Love. Be sure to purchase a few copies for distribution to
congregation members.]
Felony or no, Poison Pen Letters is a work of dark genius.
Consider the long-term implications of this, which the author recommends as the
most perfect poison pen letter ever devised. It's signed with the name of a
recently dead man.
Mrs. Terry Newton
1297 Grand Pine Avenue
Coral Gables, FL 33156
Mrs. Newton,
Although I have never met you, I feel as though I know you through your
son Frank.
I am writing you because I feel that someone must know the
truth behind my death. To be perfectly frank, you are the only person that I
can trust.
By the time you get this letter, I will be dead. Hopefully,
it will look like natural causes. In actuality, it was a suicide.
I lived with your son for several years. I loved him. I couldn't bear to
live without him. When he left me for someone who was half the man I am, it was
all I could take. That is why I killed myself.
Please keep this our secret. I am insured, but they won't pay for suicide.
Tell your son that I love him and forgive him.
[Note: the date of the postmark must correspond to death of "writer."]
The power of this letter, as Wade points out, is that no one in the world
could disbelieve it. You could savor the havoc from your holding cell,
which, though Spartan, is the ideal place to catch up on your correspondence.
Worth it? Almost.
Ellen Barry can be reached at ebarry[a]phx.com.
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