While in the army, Plug had received some advice from the Quartermaster.
“If you want to learn how to make good
money in the world of business and finance, and you don’t want to actually have
to do any work, all you need to do is observe and then imitate the behaviour of
the members of an upmarket golf club.”
Accordingly, immediately upon discharge,
Plug had taken a 2-week job as a waiter in the clubhouse of a larney Country
Club. In that fortnight he absorbed a great deal of important information. The
single most useful observation had to do with what he called the ‘cigarette box
scheme.’
“I soon noticed a pattern,” he said.
“Whenever two or more of these capitalists began discussing something in
earnest, it was inevitable that one of them would start scribbling on the back
of a cigarette box. Dunhill, usually. Looking over their shoulders, I saw that
it was simple arithmetic, with an emphasis on multiplication. It became
apparent to me that the inspiration for every innovative idea in the history of
human civilisation was developed on the back of a cigarette box, or a scrap of
material similar in size.”
“Our garden boy used to do sums in the sand
with a stick,” said Frikkie.
“Exactly,” said Plug. “How much space does
one need to write down E=mc²?”
“A matchbox would be plenty big enough,”
said Frikkie.
Plug then produced from his pocket a piece
of foolscap and a ballpoint. The paper was folded in half, and half again.
“Not being a bloody fool,” he said, “I
don’t smoke, and as a consequence don’t carry a cigarette box around with me.
But this is roughly the same size, and far more convenient. If I use both
sides, it’s equivalent to 8 cigarette boxes. That’s space for 8 brilliant
ideas.”
This is an extract from Frikkie and Plug,
which is available on Smashwords.
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