11.29.2020 – to be free, escape

to be free, escape
to be a man on my own
threw books in the sea

I’d left a box of books in Harlem in the fall, and before we sailed I went after them. I brought them aboard ship with me. But when I opened them up and looked at them that night off Sandy Hook, they seemed too much like everything I had known in the past, like the attics and basements in Cleveland, like the lonely nights in Toluca, like the dormitory at Columbia, like the furnished room in Harlem, like too much reading all the time when I was a kid, like life isn’t, as described in romantic prose; so that night, I took them all out on deck and threw them overboard. It was like throwing a million bricks out of my heart—for it wasn’t only the books that I wanted to throw away, but everything unpleasant and miserable out of my past: the memory of my father, the poverty and uncertainties of my mother’s life, the stupidities of color-prejudice, black in a white world, the fear of not finding a job, the bewilderment of no one to talk to about things that trouble you, the feeling of always being controlled by others—by parents, by employers, by some outer necessity not your own. All those things I wanted to throw away. To be free of. To escape from. I wanted to be a man on my own, control my own life, and go my own way. I was twenty-one. So I threw the books in the sea.

Whiffs of salt spray blew in my face. It was dark. Up on the poop, the wind smelt good, but I was sleepy, so I went down a pair of narrow steps into the cabin with George and Puerto Rico, and we laughed about George’s landlady, who didn’t know he had left Harlem for Africa that evening.

Then I went to bed.

From The Big Sea, An Autobiography by by Langston Hughes. (Hill and Wang – New York, 1940)

11.19.2020 – faustian bargain

faustian bargain
to commodify, lose your
personality

Since I have been working in ‘online’ since 1995, the way to make money from ‘online’ has always been part of the assignment.

In an article about the new bloggin/social sharing media site named Substack, I was struck by the lanuage in the statement, “It’s a Faustian bargain to commodify your personality.”

Anytime anyone anywhere can work Faust into a contemporary essay is an essay worth reading.

Faust is acknowledged as one of the oldest common legends in print.

The original german story goes back to the late 1400’s.

In 1592 an English translation was published, The Historie of the Damnable Life, and Deserved Death of Doctor Iohn Faustus.

Christopher Marlowe used this work as the basis for his play, The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus around 1604.

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. The first part, which is the one more closely connected to the earlier legend, was published in 1808.

It is the story of selling you soul to the Devil tomorrow for short term human gain today.

It worked back then.

It works today.

The article says:

It’s a Faustian bargain to commodify your personality. You’re free from the limiting influences of institutions.

Yet, input from editors is inevitably just replaced with the pressure of analytics.

As teen YouTubers, who were the earliest to experiment with commodifying their personalities confess, the quantification of attention both positive and negative quickly influences our decisions.

There are some sides of ourselves our subscribers want to see, others people would prefer not to …

The author, Sean Monahan, closes with:

In a few years’ time, I predict we may look back at the chaotic information ecosystem of the 2010s as a sort of social media interregnum.

Seduced by the seemingly magical qualities of our new powerful technological tools, we deluded ourselves into believing clout and exposure could be a replacement for dollars and sense.

The fragmentary properties of the internet remain in place. Strong-willed media personalities now have the tools to set up shop and operate independently.

Legacy publications will worry less about trending in social media feeds and more about the conversion rate for subscribers.

Audiences will be less global and more curated.

And most important of all, the social media channels – chastened by the techlash – will return to what they were always meant to be: places for self-promotion, not self-publishing.

Techlash and Faust.

Have to applaud it!

(Why are public thinkers flocking to Substack? by Sean Monahan – The Guardian, 17 Nov 2020)

10.23.2020 – always remember

always remember
that the future comes one day
at a time always

From the quote from Dean Acheson when he said:

The future comes one day at a time.”

Or …

Always remember that the future comes one day at a time.

Or …

The best thing about the future is that it comes only one day at a time.

I really do not like to quote quotes without attribution.

Without proper context or attribution I might as well go to work for Hallmark.

My bench mark is usually my hardcover copy of Bartlett’s familiar quotations (16th Edition) and somehow Mr. Acheson is not even included though Spiro Agnew is.

According to Wikipedia Mr. Acheson served as the 51st United States Secretary of State under President Harry S. Truman. He served as Secretary of State from January 1949 to January 1953. He helped defend America’s foreign policy during the break of the Cold War.

Acheson’s most famous decision was convincing President Truman to intervene in the Korean War in June 1950. He also persuaded Truman to dispatch aid and advisors to French forces in Indochina, though in 1968 he finally counseled President Lyndon B. Johnson to negotiate for peace with North Vietnam.

He may be more famous for being, along with President Truman, members of the Cowardly College of Communist Containment that Richard Nixon loved to hate.

Nevertheless, how, when or why Mr. Acheson said it will not change the fact that the future comes one day at time.

Always.

19.10.2020 – everyday heroes

everyday heroes
both extra ordinary
extraordinary

Again and again I am reminded of the acts of heroism in everyday life.

Not the type of acts that get noticed.

Not the type of acts that earns a medal.

A heroic act that gets noticed or earns a medal is often an act of the moment.

A heroic action that evolves quickly without thinking of oneself or ones risks in that moment.

But those daily acts of everyday life by ordinary people and not just ordinary people but extra ordinary people.

Daily acts by people who have time to think and to plan and to imagine the results of their actions and then somehow with this in mind, they still get up and back that car out of the driveway.

Sometimes these simple acts can be beyond belief.

Every day acts of every day people.

Ordinary folks.

The online dictionary defines ordinary as something “with no special or distinctive features; normal.

And that is what we see.

People with no special or distinctive features.

People who are so ordinary that they are extra ordinary.

At the same time, these same people are dealing with thoughts and pressures and processes so far beyond ordinary.

Extraordinary.

Defined online as very unusual or remarkable.

Very unusual!

Remarkable!

Heroes.

10.16.2020 – rationality?

rationality?
thinking as small children think
thoughts can change outcome

Adapted from a passage in The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion where she writes, “… there had been occasions on which I was incapable of thinking rationally. Thinking as small children think
as if my thoughts or wishes had the power to reverse the narrative, change the outcome
.”

Incapable of thinking rationally.

Thinking as small children think.

As if my thoughts or wishes had the power to reverse the narrative,

Change the outcome.

The author and the poet and the writer all at some point come to feel the impact of the one way passage of time.

As history writes its narrative, other paths can be imagined but it gets harder and harder to see how things could have turned out differently.

From the want of the nail, the shoe was last … yadda, yadda, yaddda.

Kids, children have nothing but time.

All options are open.

All possibilities are possible.

Thinking like a grown up, so called, is to think rationally.

Accept the narrative.

Accept the outcome.

Makes me want to scream OH GO ONE.

If that’s rationality.

If that’s the price of being a grown up.

You can have it.

The funny thing about the narrative of history and its outcome, no matter how much its path might be hinted at, you can’t read about until tomorrow.

And tomorrow never comes.

All options ARE open.

All possibilities ARE possible.

What to do faced with such a wondrous world of irrationality?

For myself, I am going to go to the beach.