Retirement Sparks: X Appeal

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 This is the August post;

The other day I noticed that a message was
addressed to me as Mx. Decker. I assumed it was because the sender couldn’t
decide whether I was a Miss or a Mrs. I thought that problem was solved with
the use of Ms. Apparently it’s more complicated than that. With the increasing
frequency of transgender and androgynous members in our society, it’s not just
ones marital status that could be in question. It’s also ones sexual
orientation. The use of the letter X has become a common way to circumvent all
sorts of societal unknowns.

One of the more common uses that have been
popular for ,a while now is LatinX. That’s the
gender-neutral alternative to
Latina or Latino. But I blame the explosion of the use of X today on Elon Musk
for renaming Twitter X. It
started with his SpaceX rockets. He even titled his artificial intelligence
company xAI and created a special logo for it. Lord only knows what he’ll
christen with X in the future.

To be fair, X has been around in many forms
for a while now. The X Games, a semi-annual ESPN
extreme sports competition, began in 1995 in Rhode
Island as the Extreme Games. I don’t know when it was shortened to just X. The
Xbox gaming console has been available in the U.S. since 2001.

I’m not sure what drives this X appeal, but
it’s all around us. X has always symbolized something unknown and often
mysterious. Simply thinking in terms of it having four points, we can group it
with other similar symbols. The four-leaf clover is considered lucky, perhaps
because it’s so rare (unlike X). When we find one, we usually preserve it in
plastic and put it in our wallets.

Old fashioned Dutch-style windmills that were
used to mill grain or pump water have four blades, though modern wind turbines
usually have three. Railroad crossing signs are always an X. I still remember
the scene in the movie Two For the Road
with Albert Finney and Audrey Hepburn. They’re hitchhiking and she gets a ride,
leaving him behind. Farther up the road, she’s on foot again and has been
hiding behind a railroad crossing sign; she’s so thin you can barely see her.
When he gets within sight, she pops out, flapping her arms like the crossing
sign. It was a great movie.

There are dozens of areas where X marks the
spot. Take clothing sizes for instance. We have XL, 1X, 2X, 3X etc. in women’s.
It gets even crazier for men, with XXL and XXXL. In mathematics, X is always
the horizontal axis. In science, X-rays have countless uses, but Y-rays and
Z-rays are virtually unheard of.

In popular culture, we had the X-Files
science fiction TV series back in the nineties. Remember Scully and Mulder? There’s
yet another remake of that in progress. We still have the X-Men team of mutant superheroes
from Marvel Comics. Just the thought of Nightcrawler or Wolverine can send a
frisson up ones spine! On the opposite end of the spectrum, in the Greek
alphabet, X represents the letter chi.
Many devoted Christians use chi to
refer to Christ, especially when combined with the Greek rho to make the first letters of His name.

The uses for X keep proliferating. It’s
prominent in company and brand names, like Xfinity, introduced in 2010, while
that stalwart workhorse Xerox was founded 1906. Tesla has several models, but
its Model X is the most popular. If you text a lot, you no doubt enjoy
receiving XOXO kisses and hugs from your friends.

All this having been said, I still blame Elon
Musk for the ubiquitousness of X in our lives today. Anywhere we go, there it
is. With a name like Musk, you’d think he’d overwhelm us with sex appeal. But
no, thanks to Elon and his rebranding of Twitter as X, we’re all drowning in X
appeal.

Copyright 2024 Business Theatre Unlimited

 

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