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Archive for the ‘Society’ Category

Grocery Store

I think one step in maturity is understanding we are going to have to do things we don’t enjoy to get what we want. I’m not talking about anything shady, but I heard somebody at the grocery store tell me that it was just a ‘transition’ job for them. While I knew exactly what he meant, I decided to question him further. We all want those greener pastures, and the more we look at them from our lonely hills, the more enticing they become. If the grocery store we worked at is just a transition, then what about the older people who are making their living there? Are they caught in the transition? I saw a grown woman, another cashier, break down and hug a customer because of a crisis they were going through. Nobody seemed to want to give their attention to them, but they were in tears. Comparing this with what he had told me five minutes before, I knew that once you accept something as a ‘lesser’ job, you tag the workers as lesser people. Does that make them less than human? We are all real people with real problems. I know tidbits, but I wouldn’t feel comfortable exposing anything about anybody else on the internet. Maybe for some of us this Customer Service job is temporary, but to define yourself by where you’re going and where you’ve been seems to hold little weight with me. It’s what you do with what you have. Right now, I have a couch full of books and a cousin waiting to pick me up for Chinese food. There is no transition moment of your life, you kind of have to live through it. If you look back and say that you are too good for your previous employment, have you evolved?

I was pushing carriages yesterday. Suddenly, the temperature dropped and the sky begun to drop little snow flurries—not the ideal situation. The parking lot of the grocery store wasn’t particularly bad, but the collective attitude was depressing. Everybody expects you to go out of your way to make their lives easier. I hear a lot of, I’d hate to have your job when it snows. There is a cart-pushing machine the store purchased, however, barely any of us are trained on it, so we have to resort to stacking carriages and doing all the work the old way. We have one row of smaller blue carriages for the entire store. Everybody who works their despises it, and everybody who shops their adores them. We usually try to keep the sidewalk full as well, in case of an emergency. I had placed three little extra blue carriages in the sidewalk, not unusual, and began walking back to one of the corals for more. When I turned around, I saw a little old man with a Chaplin hat, probably no taller than five feet, waving to me. His wrinkled face was concealed by a large pair of glasses. He pointed to the blue carriages and pushed them into the room. What he said was, “It’s okay, I got these.” However, what he meant was, “I know exactly how you feel right now. Let me help you out.” While he made my job harder, he made my day a lot better. I ended up moving the blue carriages back to the sidewalk when he left.

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Argot

Argot:

The term is really new to me, but I feel as if I’ve been questioning it for a while. On page 979 in Hugo’s epic, he starts a mini-essay where he defines it critically. He goes as far as calling it, “the language of misery.” When I read this, I immediately thought back to my nihilistic obsession with pointing out the hyper-real. Whether it’s scholar’s talking about Shakespeare or teens talking about the new street drug, it ultimately boils down to the manipulation of understanding. Despite speaking the same defined language, the meaning has been culturally perverted. This is something that, while it has been, should be further explored.

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After my shift ended last night, I picked up a copy of The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass. It’s a memoir of his life as slave between different owners and his eventual escape. Though short, roughly 120 pages, I would have to put this on the top of my recommendations. The copy I bought has an introduction by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. He had some issues with the Cambridge police regarding home invasion, but that isn’t important in regards to his writing. Our school actually received a visit by him late in December. Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to attend.

The narrative itself shows the barbarity of the slave owners and how they tried to rob them of intellectual progress. They feared it would lead to their freedom, and ultimately, the enslavement of the white race. I wasn’t surprised by some of the things he described, but it was gruesome and vivid. Not an easy read, but something which schools need to be teaching. Not just dead white authors.

We live in a country of monsters.

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Press 1 for education

Back at the desk with a fresh cup of coffee.

A customer asked me today why we should have to press one or two to show whether or not we speak English. I guess it was some kind of inconvenience that he needed to declare to a machine how he communicated. We live in a very diverse society, not just in regards to North America, but the human race itself. To have a machine that can help two different people who have learned to communicate differently shows some degree of a collective progress. I understand that some people do fear when their way of life is juxtaposed with something different, something they don’t understand, but that’s all the merit which that hatred has—fear.

I got a Norton Critical Edition of Shelly’s work for $.59. I’m psyched for the defense of poetry.

I’m getting excited looking at these manuscript books. I just wish at this point that I had more material to send out.

New Years for me consisted of tripping and sleeping. If there wasn’t any emotional investment in me, I could live like that.

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Reality TV

Sometimes I hesitate writing about my ideas because I don’t feel they actually hold any weight. If I’m right about this, then my characters wouldn’t be anything but crooked extensions of what I believe.

I got my hair cut today. Nothing special, but a trip to the barber is always exciting.

Because two hundred pages of French history is enough to drive me insane, I’ve taken a break from Les Mis, and made some dents in other books.

I listen to a lot of talk radio. I’ve tried to find NPR, but I feel like it’s an exclusive club that I wasn’t invited to. One of the new hosts on 96.9 Boston, wtkk.com for people who aren’t in the area, was discussing what the expectations of reality television is doing to the way we perceive all media. Up until about a year ago, I found reality television more annoying than anything, but more recently I’m seeing some darker sides to it. On one hand, I can see that reality television is an outlet where people can more easily associate themselves with what they’re watching. However, after looking closer at what’s going on in the background, we see that these shows are actually heavily scripted. The script is geared toward what the audience is expecting to see: hyper-exaggerated dramatic tension. Now, if we view reality television with the understanding that the show correctly represents real social archetypes in society, then we are vulnerable to having or expectation for ourselves and others warped. If it were more widely accepted that these shows are actually fictitious, the attachment would lose its magic.

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Alarming

I’ve been working on a presentation on gender roles determined by rap and R&B, and there is a lot of alarming information in here. It’s no surprise, though. The focus of traditional rap lyrics between 1980 and 2000 involved rape and dehumanization of woman first, and then comparing one’s male opponent to a woman to make him seem ‘less than a person.’ Very disgusting.

Speaking of women, somebody relatively close to me just started her wordpress today. You can follow her over at: curiouskristie.wordpress.com

She will be keeping records of her many adventures as she studies abroad in Holland next semester.

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