Well, God, I suppose You think You’re clever, To reward the slog from poverty with a comfort food-clogged artery, You Great Almighty Satirist. But even that devil Darwin never warned that in the next century our weightiest concern would be the survival of the fattest.
And how our footsore ancestors would baulk at this idea: they pay to walk. Not from the office chair to the escalator, Nor from the elevator to the parking meter, But plugged into a hi-tech humming hamster wheel at the Fitness Centre.
Fitness Centre. Not gymnasium, note: no ropes, medicine balls or boxing rings here, Just women in imagined rowing boats, Sweating as they watch their soaps, three times a week. Might as well call it a Fitness Boutique, Now we’ve feminised hard work. Nothing manly about these physical jerks – gurning at the mirror - packaged up with childcare vouchers and other perks. Nothing dignified either, we’re not training for a bout or a battle, only straining for a desperate grab at a shot at a chance in the ever-shortening last dance between sexual ineptitude and final decrepitude. An obscene frittering of calories and chunks of fattened salaries that could be fed to the world’s thin or at least spent on beer or other sin. The final word in decadent waste. And all because those ancestors had an urge to gorge on fat, and beef up for the winter, and left us with the taste.
Yes, an odd sort of God to derive any pleasure from watching the pain at the Leisure Centre. But then again, After all that toil and grief, There is that sweet relief in getting home, the gorgeous wilt onto the sofa, and the gorging without guilt, And it’s not so much the race, as having run it, And not so much the thing, as having done it. And there is a joy in empty energy spent, So perhaps it’s as that devil Darwin meant, God’s not cruel, but just indifferent.