BEWARE THE TIGER
Safety rules are a nuisance. They restrict you from
doing what you want to do in the way you want to do it. You would think
that the person who wrote safety rules must have been an old fuddy-duddy
who couldn't stand to see people having fun--that they sat down with their
aching corns and wrote the safety rules much the way some musicians compose
music at one sitting. Such is not the case: Safety rules were written with
the splinters of human bones dipped in human blood.
The rules began to be written before people even
began to think. They perhaps were what started them to think in the first
place.
People crawling around in the prehistoric age had no safety rules; they had no language either. They noticed that a furry looking animal with yellow stripes was eating their spouse and children. They had a thought (their first one): "That beast not friend", then a second thought: " That beast
enemy!"
Then came the first invention in the history of humankind
--they made a safety rule:"Beware of the Tiger."
The first safety rule was perhaps just a screech
emitted in the same key every time a tiger was sighted. It was annoying
to the people who had to stop doing whatever they were doing and go climb
a tree or crawl under a rock. It was annoying, but the tigers began to
get skinny, and people became more numerous.
Following the same line of thought, they decided
that the lion, too, was an enemy and invented a different screech for the
lion and another safety rule.
People who were annoyed at having to run for their
lives now for the first time knew from why they were running, without first
having seen it.
The tragic thing about safety rules is that they
were slow in being made. The people had to be eaten by the tiger and the
lion before the rules came into existence.
How much nicer it would have been if the person who
invented the emery wheel also made a sign at the same time and hung it
over the machine saying, "Wear goggles but not gloves when using this machine."
Think of the countless mangled hands and sightless eyes and lives lost
during the interval between the invention of the grinding wheel and the
hanging of that annoying safety sign above it!
In the event that an accident should befall you,
it is conceivable that the person the company has to train to take your
job will be a better worker than you; or that the person your widow marries
will be a better person than you; or your children's stepparent will be
better for them than you.
But -- why put it to a test? The person who gains the most by following a safety rule