I have this condition where I don't know I'm nervous. I'm cool, calm, and collected most of the time--blasé as my friend calls it--so, I don't FEEL nervous. However, over the years I have learned to RECOGNIZE when I'm nervous. I can tell when I get nervous because I start to sweat. My palms go first, my underarms second, and my brain is third. My brain is actually surprised every time it happens. "My palms are clammy. My underarms are hot. Oh, hey! I guess I'm nervous!"
Last June my three-piece Italian style suit and I sat in an office. I was being interviewed for a job. It was the first time I'd interviewed for a job in 4 years and it was probably the most prestigious job for which I'd ever been interviewed.
It was summery warm. The office was glass and no bigger than a shoebox. Small enough that the three of us inside the office (myself and the two interviewing me) had to sit with our knees touching one another.
As they probed me with questions, I began to sweat. Profusely. No way to hide it, running down my face, had to wipe it away, somebody hand me a handkerchief perspiring. Which was mortifying. Which only made the situation worse.
I thought the job was no big deal. I thought I didn't really care about it. If this job didn't pan out, another one would. It wasn't until I was walking away in my damp dress shirt, dejected with disaster, I realized I must have wanted it much more than I thought.
I bring this up because--looking back--I realize high school must have been one never-ending, anxiety-filled mess. I didn't feel like a mess. I felt quite put together. Academically, I excelled--and if the bullies were seeking scapegoats they never checked the black box theatre. But, I've never been very good socially. And high school is a social pressure cooker. One period of gym and 7 more periods working out your nerves.
In summer I would blame it on the heat. In winter I'd blame it on the fleece. I even wondered if it was happening to everyone else and I just didn't know it. Being the certifiably dry (humor and otherwise), self-assured person I am now, I realize that wasn't the case. I even resorted to wearing underarm pads at one point. It was that severe.
I remember one evening I was hanging out with my friends Marc and Katie. They were playing the most wonderfully horrible game. You raise your arms above your head. Someone pins down your legs while another pins down your arms. Then, they give you a task to do--name 10 state capitals for instance--while they tickle you nonstop. The tickling only ceases once the task is accomplished.
It was quite hysterical to watch people loose all mental capabilities and fight their way through the tickling's physical dominance. Everyone else had done their turn. They asked me to do it. I declined. Not because I was afraid of the tickling; I was afraid of raising my arms. I knew my armpits were unsuitable for any hand. The spotty sight of my darkened shirt alone was embarrassing enough to decline. There was no way I could let people pin my arms above my head and put their hands in there!
They badgered me. They said everyone else had done it and I wasn't allowed to leave until I had done it too. I finally finagled them into letting me get something from my car first. I came back with a thick leather jacket on. They teased me for trying to cheat the system, pointing out my jacket would dampen the effect of the tickling. In reality, I was just mortified to have my armpits exposed and knew the leather would cover it. Even though they teased me for trying to cheat, I was RELIEVED they interpreted my actions that way versus the actual alternative.
Too bad the job interview didn't ask me what my most embarrassing moment was. I could have just relayed that story. Given the Niagra spramp happening down my face they probably felt I was already embarrassed enough. And, they were right.
If you could go back and tell your younger self one thing, what would it be? Another classic interview question. I guess that's the thing. The whole point of this. I'm proud of the person I've become and the discoveries I've made. I've become confident and solidified enough in who I am that I don't sweat it anymore.* And, I wish I could instill some of that in that poor, socially insecure, overweight high school kid who must have internally trembled his way to graduation.
Perhaps that's the reason why we sweat when we get nervous: to counteract the trembling; to keep the chaffing at bay and come away relatively unscathed.
*Except in interviews, or auditions, or on dates
Sunday, March 22, 2015
Monday, September 1, 2014
Roll the Dice, Pay the Price
Life
is like sitting down to a game of Monopoly.
The
board game Monopoly is a micro scale and system. It's all about having your
weaknesses exposed, facing your fears, trying times, and progression. There are
smaller, day-to-day tasks, and then there are bigger fish to fry.
Of
course the looming threat of landing in jail is always there. The chance of
winning the lottery always exists. And with every round of the board, we pass
Go and collect $200 dollars just as every year we pass birthdays, holidays, and
vacations that rejuvenate us.
The
money represents self-worth. Everything from property prices to taxes and rent,
and everyone from the Hat and the Shoe to the banker is trying to take it away
from you. The idea is to not only keep as much as possible but earn as much as possible. How much
is in your bank?
The
properties around the board--the Oriental Avenues and St. Charles
Places--represent life's smaller ordeals. These ordeals fluctuate in color,
worth, and impact. Some of these ordeals are more expensive, and thereby, take
more of a toll than others. For instance, having food stuck in your teeth might
be your $60 Baltic Avenue. Whereas, encounters with snakes might be your $400
Boardwalk.
They
are inevitable and uncomfortable. They rattle our nerves and cause us stress
and anxiety. But, they are nothing we can't handle. We never know where the
dice is going to take us next, but we know the majority of the board is made up
of these properties. Therefore, landing on one of them is most likely. And,
because we know we can get through them with little to no damage, we mostly
move safely through these properties as day-to-day tasks.
That
is until we see them being owned by others. Once into the game, we
realize we're surrounded by property owners. Those with ownership over life's
ordeals. And, where we once flitted unthinkingly now becomes a minefield of
insecure steps. We compare ourselves to others and find ourselves lacking. We
wish we owned those properties.
Therefore,
the strategy of the game is to own as many properties as possible. The more
properties you own, the more secure you sit.
The
other players in the game--those chasing us around the board, those out to
stifle us, debilitate us, drain us, and destroy us so they can win--will try
and own the property first. The other players represent life's bigger ordeals:
financial ruin, lack of acceptance, loneliness, failure, insecurity, dying,
etc. When one of these other players lands on a space you own, they owe you
rent.
When
you are self-assured, you own your space. When another player like loneliness
then comes knocking on your door, you can take his power by charging him rent.
The more rent you accumulate, the more you can gird your property. You may
already own the space, but now you can fortify and protect it by building
houses and hotels. Houses and hotels only increase the price of rent. The more
rent a player has to pay, the weaker they become and the stronger you become.
Until, finally, you have all their money and you own the other player as well.
You have drained loneliness of all his power. He is no longer a player in the
game.
However,
if loneliness beats you there and owns the property first, the opposite will
happen. It is not impossible, but regaining control of loneliness' property
will be a tough uphill battle. It is always a race to see which side will edge
the other out.
When
you bankrupt an opponent in Monopoly, all of their assets become yours.
Similarly, when you bankrupt a fear in life, you own its power. The power it
had to exert over you becomes your power to exert over it. And, it all stems
from purchasing those pesky little ordeals in the beginning when you have the
chance.
To
win the game of life (which is ironic because The Game of Life is an actual
game. But, in this analogy I've likened Monopoly unto life) you start by owning
the smaller ordeals. When you face an issue head on and overcome it, you own a
piece of yourself that you didn't before. It may seem small and insignificant.
But, by and by, you become formidable to other opponents the more of yourself
you accumulate. You build up the strength and resources you need to take them
down.
I'm
not saying that Marvin Gardens is going to be life-altering. On a conscious
level, you probably won't even notice a difference. But, I don't believe a
person can vanquish a fear (no matter how tiny it may be) without filling a
crack in their character (no matter how tiny it may be). I believe that
somewhere a chink in the armor will be soldered. And, I think fusing one makes
it easier to address the next, and the next...and so on, until you are a chain
that cannot be broken.
A
chain of hotels and houses in every property across the board. A chain having
exclusive control. A monopoly.
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Capstone to a High School Career: Filling in the Blank Pages
"You Rock! Have a great summer!"
"You are so fun to be around!"
"I'm so glad I got to know you!"
These are quotes in my yearbook from my junior year of high school. Why my junior year, you ask? Well, I'll tell you.
When I was a sophomore, I was the only kid whose mom forgot to order a yearbook. Didn't even know until the last day of school. Went to pick up my yearbook and was told nobody paid for one. So, I wandered around the school halls empty handed, watching everyone else excitedly sharing sonnets and penning poetry in each other's end-of-year keepsakes.
Eventually, my drama teacher, Andra Thorne, noticed my lack of participation. I explained the mishap to her. She pulled a couple pieces of copy paper from the printer and stapled them together. On the front she wrote, "Nick Siler's Cool Yearbook :-)" It was a wonderful act of sentiment. But a bit too late in the game. Yearbook signing was pretty much over by that point. Still, I'm grateful to her. It was much easier feeding those few blank pages down the paper shredder than it was fitting an entire glossy yearbook.*
My senior year was a different story. Everything during my senior year felt the need to be momentous. A farewell "it's been nice knowing you" passage just wouldn't suffice. It wouldn't accurately fulfill how wonderful my year with these people had been. And, I am a slave to accuracy. So, rather than showing up with a pen and winging it the morning of...I spent HOURS typing and addressing individual letters to each person.
I was still finishing the letters the morning of the last day of school. And, it took me longer than expected (slave to accuracy). So, I didn't end up making it to school until 11:00 o'clock. On the last day of school students vacate the premises as soon as possible. The halls are mostly desolate by 11:00. By the time I arrived to deliver my letters, most of the recipients were already gone. My summer vacation kicked off by looking up addresses in the phone book and mailing out the unclaimed letters.
"Hey Nick! Math was the greatest! Have a great summer! I'll see you around!" (thanks, Natalie McGuire)
This is what normal people write in yearbooks. Me--the enigma that I am--I type full page, single-spaced, self-addressed letters. Aye, yai, yai (shakes head at himself). What a rare character I am.
Needless to say, my senior yearbook ended up rather barren as well.
So, that's what I have. My 11th Grade "So Glad You Were in My Seminary Class!" Yearbook (thanks, Anna Packer). Which is fine with me. It's the best of both worlds anyway. I have all my year-older and year-younger favorites together. Plus (if I'm being completely honest), I don't really care. I don't look to the books for guidance now, nor have they shaped me into the person I've become. So, I think I'd be just fine without them.
It's interesting, isn't it, how epochal things can seem at the time? Sometimes, in retrospect, your biggest moments become your biggest questions: why did I spend so much energy; why did I care so much? Time is the undefeated distancing champion. And, with distance, comes perspective. And, with perspective, comes greater knowledge.
Perhaps recognizing this IS the culmination of my high school education… Maybe high school was all just a set up for me to look back one day and realize sometimes things that seem like a really big deal…in reality…are not. Perhaps it wasn’t about fractions and decent comma placement. Maybe those 180 days a year (yes, I even went to school on make-up snow days) were all leading up to this one, all-important life-lesson that I had to Dumbledore on my own! Perhaps this essay is my final paper, my thesis, my final exam, and today…I passed! July 10th, 2014—I, Nicholas Siler, have finally graduated high school!
IT'S WATER!! Did you hear me, Annie Sullivan? It has a name! And, it's name is WATER.
Wouldn't you know it? I finally graduated high school and there still isn't anyone around to sign my yearbook. Some things never change ;-)
Epilogue
3 things that struck me going back through the yearbook
1. How many names I don't even recognize.
2. How many people thought we were going to stay in touch.
3. How many girls left me their phone number. (yeehaw)
Also, Jocelyn Stayner Gibbons (BYU grad and mother of 3), who graduated in the top 5% of our class, left me with this legacy I now pass on to you.
"PEOPLE HAVE THE RIGHT TO WALK AROUND BUTT NAKED"
Words to live by, Jocelyn. Words to live by.
*This was a joke. I didn't really shred my yearbook, homemade or otherwise.
"You are so fun to be around!"
"I'm so glad I got to know you!"
These are quotes in my yearbook from my junior year of high school. Why my junior year, you ask? Well, I'll tell you.
When I was a sophomore, I was the only kid whose mom forgot to order a yearbook. Didn't even know until the last day of school. Went to pick up my yearbook and was told nobody paid for one. So, I wandered around the school halls empty handed, watching everyone else excitedly sharing sonnets and penning poetry in each other's end-of-year keepsakes.
Eventually, my drama teacher, Andra Thorne, noticed my lack of participation. I explained the mishap to her. She pulled a couple pieces of copy paper from the printer and stapled them together. On the front she wrote, "Nick Siler's Cool Yearbook :-)" It was a wonderful act of sentiment. But a bit too late in the game. Yearbook signing was pretty much over by that point. Still, I'm grateful to her. It was much easier feeding those few blank pages down the paper shredder than it was fitting an entire glossy yearbook.*
My senior year was a different story. Everything during my senior year felt the need to be momentous. A farewell "it's been nice knowing you" passage just wouldn't suffice. It wouldn't accurately fulfill how wonderful my year with these people had been. And, I am a slave to accuracy. So, rather than showing up with a pen and winging it the morning of...I spent HOURS typing and addressing individual letters to each person.
I was still finishing the letters the morning of the last day of school. And, it took me longer than expected (slave to accuracy). So, I didn't end up making it to school until 11:00 o'clock. On the last day of school students vacate the premises as soon as possible. The halls are mostly desolate by 11:00. By the time I arrived to deliver my letters, most of the recipients were already gone. My summer vacation kicked off by looking up addresses in the phone book and mailing out the unclaimed letters.
"Hey Nick! Math was the greatest! Have a great summer! I'll see you around!" (thanks, Natalie McGuire)
This is what normal people write in yearbooks. Me--the enigma that I am--I type full page, single-spaced, self-addressed letters. Aye, yai, yai (shakes head at himself). What a rare character I am.
Needless to say, my senior yearbook ended up rather barren as well.
So, that's what I have. My 11th Grade "So Glad You Were in My Seminary Class!" Yearbook (thanks, Anna Packer). Which is fine with me. It's the best of both worlds anyway. I have all my year-older and year-younger favorites together. Plus (if I'm being completely honest), I don't really care. I don't look to the books for guidance now, nor have they shaped me into the person I've become. So, I think I'd be just fine without them.
It's interesting, isn't it, how epochal things can seem at the time? Sometimes, in retrospect, your biggest moments become your biggest questions: why did I spend so much energy; why did I care so much? Time is the undefeated distancing champion. And, with distance, comes perspective. And, with perspective, comes greater knowledge.
Perhaps recognizing this IS the culmination of my high school education… Maybe high school was all just a set up for me to look back one day and realize sometimes things that seem like a really big deal…in reality…are not. Perhaps it wasn’t about fractions and decent comma placement. Maybe those 180 days a year (yes, I even went to school on make-up snow days) were all leading up to this one, all-important life-lesson that I had to Dumbledore on my own! Perhaps this essay is my final paper, my thesis, my final exam, and today…I passed! July 10th, 2014—I, Nicholas Siler, have finally graduated high school!
IT'S WATER!! Did you hear me, Annie Sullivan? It has a name! And, it's name is WATER.
Wouldn't you know it? I finally graduated high school and there still isn't anyone around to sign my yearbook. Some things never change ;-)
Epilogue
3 things that struck me going back through the yearbook
1. How many names I don't even recognize.
2. How many people thought we were going to stay in touch.
3. How many girls left me their phone number. (yeehaw)
Also, Jocelyn Stayner Gibbons (BYU grad and mother of 3), who graduated in the top 5% of our class, left me with this legacy I now pass on to you.
"PEOPLE HAVE THE RIGHT TO WALK AROUND BUTT NAKED"
Words to live by, Jocelyn. Words to live by.
*This was a joke. I didn't really shred my yearbook, homemade or otherwise.
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
The Race to Erase Racism: Witch Hunting in the 21st Century
I have been
reading a book lately that indirectly involves discrimination in the
subplot. Two boys are prejudged to be idiotic and simple-minded when they
leave their homes upriver and travel to a tavern in the next closest town. They
are scoffed at for their ragged clothes and funny accents. Their clothes
change, their accents adapt, they continually prove themselves to be wiser than
any other character, and yet, they continue to battle new and differing
preconceived notions no matter where they travel. It’s a harsh
introduction to a totem pole society they’ve never known before; no such
hierarchy existed in their village.
They speak of
the beautiful, isolated naiveté of their home. Before venturing out, they
thought their clothes were nice. They didn’t know anyone who wore
nicer. They were completely unaware their clothes were rags until they
were labeled as such by others. Their tongue is the common vernacular of
their environment. They’d never known other before. And it
certainly never sounded funny or out of place until they traveled out to a
place where their words were laughed at. When taverners called their
reckless behavior foolish they tried to explain there was no need for
protection or secrets back home. It would be an easy task to tell whose
resources had suddenly increased should someone in the village take to
stealing. Rather, supplies were more communal: those who had a little
more remembering times they had had a little less and had been helped by those
who had a little more.
It reminded me
of when I was young enough to be colorblind. Before I’d learned of
slavery and civil rights, holocausts, revolutions, liberations, and
nine-elevens. Though I learned of them in respectable ways, reverenced
with woe and forbearing repetition, I nevertheless can deny they didn’t implant
the discernment of ‘different’ notwithstanding. Yes, I learned to respect
and appreciate differences from these historical lessons, but an inescapable
byproduct of equality lessons is learning that inequality existed in the first
place. I’m pleased with an accepting mind. But, sometimes I still
yearn for the childish purity of not recognizing differences at all.
However, since differences do exist and can no longer be denied, it is best to
glean from them what we can. A profound lesson I learned from watching a
Where Are They Now recap episode of "Wipe Swap" last night.
LOL!
One of my pet
peeves is the way “racist” and “bigot” have replaced “witch” in the
finger-pointing hunt for modern-day scapegoats. I often cringe when I
hear these words pop up in articles and media headlines because I find the
situations so blown out of proportion and the labels so misplaced.
Without getting
into too much psychological mumbo jumbo, human beings organize, assemble, and
classify information according to the availability heuristic, i.e., what’s
available to us. What is available to us? Previous information that
we’ve already encountered and categorized.
We process new
information based on old information. We lump like things together.
When we see a four-legged creature with spots and a long neck, we expect it to
be a giraffe. Why? Because in our brains, these are the qualities
that delineate 'giraffe' from other animals. We anticipate dogs barking
and wagging their tail because all other dogs we’ve met have barked and wagged
their tails. And so on, and so on.
The availability
heuristic is a shortcut: giving first-time attention to every scrap of matter
we encounter would be debilitating. The heuristic allows us to process
information quickly so we can move on. This way we can walk down the
trail without having to scrutinize each rock along the way.
Remember how the
School House Rock pronouns video demonstrated the useful timeliness of not
having to repeat Rufus Xavier Sarsaparilla over and over? Or how Yelp
takes information previously input (comments, reviews, ratings), organizes
them, processes them, and then presents them to you in one easy search result
so you don’t have to spend all night driving around to different
restaurants? Your brain kind of works the same way.
Just as you put
keywords into a search bar, your senses (see, hear, smell, taste, touch) send
key information to your brain and your brain replies with the top
results. For example: Ears to the brain—I’m hearing a loud, rushing,
whooshing sound coming from overhead. Brain computes—there must be a
plane flying over you in the sky. Brain to eyes—check if there is a plane
flying overhead in the sky. Eyes to brain—yes, we see a plane flying
overhead in the sky. Brain confirmed, mind at ease. Unless it’s
something really bizarre we’ve never encountered in all our years of sensory collection,
these computations are so habitual they happen instantaneously and
unconsciously.
Key sights
(four-legged), key sounds (barking noise), key touches (hairy or furry)—any key
information your senses provide to your brain are processed instantaneously and
unconsciously (it’s a dog) because they are homespun from common consistencies
(dogs are commonly four-legged, hairy, barking creatures). And, common
consistencies translate to people as easy as anything else.
I’m originally
from Utah. When people learn I’m from Utah the first question they ask
is, “Are you Mormon?” This is a prejudiced question. It’s
prejudging based on what people know of Utah. It doesn’t bother me.
I smile and answer. This doesn’t cause headlines or social media outpour
because the prejudice is based on fact. It’s prejudiced, but
logical. Utah has a higher Mormon population than anywhere else in the
world. Therefore, being from Utah, there is a high probability I myself
am Mormon.
People are aware
not EVERYONE from Utah will automatically be Mormon. They are open to the
possibility I may say no. But, they’re also not senseless enough to
ignore a correlation. And, why should they? Why deny it? A
correlation is a correlation. It’s there. It exists. It
exists for a reason: because there is a common consistency. And, this
common consistency helps us group, categorize, and process information.
Today, the sun
is shining. It’s in the habit of rising. In fact, there is a strong
correlation between morning and the sun rising. It rose yesterday and the
day before too.
When I stop and
think about it, I know it will not last forever. A day will come when the
morning arrives and the sun has not risen. Every night I lay my head down
I know there is potential the sun will not come up again. However, there
has never been a day in my life when the sun has failed to rise.
Therefore, I expect the sun to rise again tomorrow. Because it has risen
every day thus far. I anticipate it despite knowing the potential for a
different outcome. This makes the sun consistent and reliable, it doesn’t
make me a sunist.
In the medical
world they have a saying: When you hear hoof beats, think of horses, not
zebras. There are reliable reasons stereotypes exist.
The fact of the
matter is lower socioeconomic environments are more likely to have higher drug
abuse and crime rates. I have lived paycheck to paycheck. I’ve been
poor. I have lived in government housing. And I know that most of the
lower class is good people just trying to get by; put food on the table; make
it to another day. That still doesn’t change statistics.
“[The poor]
suffer higher disease rates, death rates and imprisonment than their affluent
brethren. They are imprisoned at much higher rates and they are executed for
capital crimes more often than any other group.”--http://www.pubdef.ocgov.com/poverty.htm
Additionally,
certain races and ethnicities are more likely to reside in these
environments.
“SES [socioeconomic
status] and race and ethnicity are intimately intertwined. Research has shown
that race and ethnicity in terms of stratification often determine a person’s
socioeconomic status (House & Williams, 2000)…African American children
are three times more likely to live in poverty than Caucasian children.
American Indian/Alaska Native, Hispanic, Pacific Islander, and Native Hawaiian
families are more likely than Caucasian and Asian families to live in poverty
(Costello, Keeler, & Angold, 2001; National Center for Education
Statistics, 2007).”
When it comes to
the workforce, women too make their own bed, so to speak. Highly educated
or not, women are more likely to favor children over jobs.
“There is little
difference in labor market activity by college selectivity among women without
children and women who are not married. But the presence of children is
associated with far lower labor market activity among married elite graduates.
Most women eventually marry and have children, and the net effect is that labor
market activity is on average lower…”-- http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Columns/2013/04/17/Why-Women-Are-Leaving-the-Workforce-in-Record-Numbers
Just as my
fellow Utahns and I are more likely to be Mormon, those from poverty stricken
areas are more likely to be involved in crime Minorities are more likely to be
from poverty stricken areas. Women are more likely leave a job. These
are just a few examples of a list that goes on and on, but they are not racial
judgments; they’re statistics. Of course they’re not all
encompassing. Of course they don’t apply to everyone. But, they do
make particular behaviors warranted.
Should a person
bypass a hitchhiker, it doesn’t necessarily make them bigoted; it makes them
educated in self-preservation. A boss wary of handing over a job to a
woman may also be schooled in self-preservation. Business owners have to
do what makes the most sense to ensure the business keeps going.
Sometimes a less qualified man actually becomes more qualified simply because
he is more likely to stay with the company, which in the long-term outlook is
more beneficial. Are these conundrums of life unfair? Yes.
Irritating enough to pull hair out? Yes. But, are they
racist? Not necessarily.
In order to show
true racism a level of unity and equality must first exist. Imagine
putting two identical cups filled with identical clear-looking liquids in front
of lemon-lime soda enthusiasts who on a previous questionnaire all disclosed
their favorite soda is Sprite. One cup is labeled Sprite while the other
is labeled 7-Up, yet BOTH CUPS contain 7-Up. The subjects are
instructed to sample both sodas and choose which they think tastes best.
Even though both
cups contain the SAME liquid, and NEITHER cup contains Sprite,
undoubtedly these enthusiasts will be likely to say the liquid in the cup
labeled Sprite tastes better. This is an example of a truly biased superiority.
Believing Sprite tastes better based purely on name alone. Unfortunately,
creating a similarly empirical environment to assess racism in people is not
only difficult, it’s arguably impossible.
How can
you obtain equalization between two things that are innately
different? No matter how equally they measure up on paper, women will
always have something different than a man. Despite being the same age,
growing up in the same neighborhood, having the same accent or lack thereof, attending
all the same schools, taking all the same classes, earning all the same
grades, being clean-cut, well-groomed gentlemen in business suits, an
African-American male and a Caucasian male will always have one inalterable
difference. The catch-22 is that without the difference racism would have
no boundary, and therefore, cease to exist, and with the
difference there is no way to accurately assess presence of racism without
causation possibly being attributed to extraneous variables.
Suppose a boss
interviews the two men mentioned who share all the same credentials but
differ in skin color and the boss hires the Caucasian male. Ultimately,
the boss chose the candidate he was most comfortable with. It’s
possible he believes one race to be superior to another. Maybe he was
raised in a predominantly Caucasian area and unconsciously sides with
familiarity. This would make sense. Tastes in food, entertainment,
etc., are all heavily influenced by the nostalgia of childhood.
But--especially in this day and age--it really could come down to a host of
other possibilities: an extra smile, an eyebrow raise, maybe the tone of voice,
or the speed at which one talks. There are hundreds of reasons why one
was possibly selected over the other.
Thus, finger
pointing and labeling based on one isolated incident is
an unwarranted jump to conclusions. Repetition is needed to
establish a common stream of behavior and intent. When people in
heated moments become red-faced, desperate, or fed up they often lash out
with one-time words they would not otherwise say. This doesn't
mean they believe it. Were these words consistently repeated over time
and situations, root behavior could be established and labeled. However,
generally people who are upset don't mean what they say and will own up to such
once they calm down. Repetition and intent must be taken into
account.
Knives are the
second most common murder weapon in the United States. Everyday
knives are used for heinous purposes. And yet, knives continue to be
used everyday in every kitchen across the country. What's the
difference? Intent.
Knives may be a common killing tool,
but the majority of this country is actually using knives
to butter bread. Like knives, words have the power to
destroy lives. But, at the end of the day, words are just
words. It is the way in which we use words that matters. Not
every taboo word that slips out is meant to be a swipe at the
neck. As mindless as chopping lettuce, it is possible for such
words to surface without malice.
Because it is
the intent behind words that matters, it's fairly ridiculous we have
outlawed words in the first place. It's a blind hope
that eliminating the word will somehow also eliminate the malicious
intent behind it. But, plucking a leaf off a tree has never
succeeded in killing the branch, let alone squashing the trunk.
Meanwhile, we've become so pavlovian trained to hear sirens anytime
particular buzz words are used that we've stopped caring who is the
real enemy and who is not and have simply started condemning
everyone. This doesn't seem particularly healthy.
I am aware that
racism continues to be a very real and prevalent threat. However, most often this is not what I’m
seeing in the media. What I see in
national coverage is a grain of sand sensationalized into a mountain. This is why I'm less concerned with what
Paula Deen may or may not have said in her kitchen at one point, and more
concerned that neighbors having an Easter-egg hunt in Richmond, Virginia found supremacist-planted
eggs with notes saying “’Diversity’=White Genocide” and links to
“Whitemanmarch.com.” Censoring the words
does not censor the ideology. The
ideology is what I’d like to see expelled.
Not the livelihood of media-selected scapegoats.
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Interior Design: Subletting Go and Sprucing the Soul
I’ve always longed to be taller and more narrow.
When we are born we inhabit our body's blueprint much the same as the four-walled structure of a house or office.
Like the walls of a room, there are things about my body I can change. I can fluctuate my weight, I can part my hair differently, I can tan my skin. But, there is a much longer and concrete list of things I will never be able to change. Height, for starters.
One of the most important factors in determining a person’s happiness is having a grasp on what is in your control and what is out of it. A person continually fighting against that which is inalterable will not be happy and will regret such time spent. Likewise, a person stagnant and unprogressive will be similarly discontent.
One of the last classes I took before graduating was biopsychology. I had an enthusiastic professor who had an extraordinary gift to explain brain functions simply and sensibly. Day one of our class she testified to the power of the brain. She spent the rest of the semester proving her words accurate.
As a psychologist and an observer, I too cannot deny the power of the brain. It is astounding what it can do, incredible what it can believe, and phenomenal how differently it can perceive. When desperate or willful enough, our brain can actually create what we want to see as clearly as a lake miraging in the desert. Even so--just as I cannot make myself taller--our brain also has its limits. Eventually, the lake will turn back into a pumpkin.
Did you know we are born with an emotional skeleton just as intractable as our physical bones? A frame from which feelings must hang and a structure beyond which they cannot extend?
All too often I see people examining the walls they inhabit, embarrassed and vulnerable to have them bare. So, they pick up a roller and paint the wall blue. Two, three coats of paint, if necessary.
“See my wall?” They say. “It’s blue.”
The rest of us are not convinced. “No,” we conclude. “Your PAINT is blue. The wall, however, is only being masked by blue paint.”
“The wall is BLUE!” they defend. “I’ve determined a blue wall is what I want. It is necessary. Blue wall is ultimately what I need to be happy. I have made the wall blue. The wall will stay blue.”
And, sensing how important it is for this wall to be blue, we treat these people as though their wall is blue. “Hey! How’s that blue wall?” we say. And “Good for you for making that wall blue!” we encourage.
Some people even believe it. “His wall really is blue,” they say. “He told me so.” And “I’ve seen it. In person. His wall really is blue.” Another testament to what the power of the brain can see.
But, ultimately, the wall has been painted. Masked. Coated. Eventually, there will be a chip. A crack. An impression. Gluey ideas, gummy experiences, and indelible people will stick to the wall and peel strips away when they leave. And there these marks will stay like scars, shaming the painter. Until he realizes no one left seems to mind the parts of the bare wall peeking through. In fact, he doesn’t mind them so much himself. Those are the parts that make him...him! The blue may be pretty, but it has been covering his very essence. And away he’ll rip the paint in large, hurling pieces, relishing in new-found freedom, his wall, at last, finally able to breathe…and be.
I guess I've seen too many fish gasping to be birds to conclude anything other than fish are meant to be fish.
Monday, March 17, 2014
If You Seek Amy…You Might Want to Check Flight 370
So… This legitimately happened today.
"Hey, whatever happened to Amy?"
"I don’t know. But I
still seek her."
Speaking of seeking, let's talk about this Malaysia Airlines
Flight 370.
Now that all the lands have been discovered, and it's possible
to travel across whole continents in a 5-hour span, and Google-mapping
satellites let you zoom in on your house from outer space, and the internet
allows you to video chat with someone on the other side of the hemisphere, and
Disney has that insatiable ride to remind us how small the world is…it's
difficult to remember just how large the world really is. Any rescue worker can
attest to that.
I remember how it took police a month of searching to find Lori
Hacking's body in a landfill, even though they knew the date she had been
deposited there. Susan Powell was not as fortunate. They never could find her
remains because--given Josh Powell's story--she could have been anywhere
between Salt Lake City and Las Vegas. They called these cases a needle in a
haystack. Now, we're talking about one commercial jet in the middle of how many
thousands of miles of ocean?
Having said that, considering we track migration patterns of
honey bees from Georgia to Minnesota and whales from Australia to Alaska, it
seems a bit odd airliners don’t automatically come equipped with a homing
device strong enough to make itself known (Ba-OOOOO-oook! Come to Mommy!). I
guess migration patterns aren’t really pinpoint accurate either. Just an
occasional ping here and there. And there really isn’t anywhere to put a tower
in the middle of the ocean. Or…IS there… I see a billion-dollar idea forming!
My other thought is this: what if the Indian Ocean is just a red
herring? What if the plane is just circling around Antarctica (another place
where there is nothing to ping), waiting to draw Scotland Yard, and Interpol,
and all authorities to the Indian Ocean so they can swoop in and take the
Western Hemisphere in its completely vulnerable state???
What if the movie being shown on the plane as it circles
Antarctica is Clue—a 1980s comedy featuring a butler used as a red herring—and,
ironically, passengers don’t have a clue it parallels the plans because the
movie is comedic, American, and from the 1980s—none of which can be taken
seriously????
One final thought: it’s kind of interesting how closely mayday
resembles Malay, as in the language and people of Malaysia.
“Mayday! Mayday! Come in Maylay! This is Maylay A and we’re in
mayday!! Onboard it's melee! Do you copy, Malay? We are mayday!”
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