Wednesday, February 9, 2011

What Are You Thinking?


Dear Teenagers,

Your life is being wasted. Stop worrying about what outfit to wear or what music to listen to. Stop doing drugs so that you don't feel left out. That guy who broke your heart is not thinking about you anymore, so stop thinking about him. That pathetic girl you look at in the mirror is not who you are meant to be.

Some things in life are harder than others. But this I know for sure. If you believe in yourself and hope for a better day, things will get easier than they have been. Trust in yourself and in those who love you and maybe stop worrying what other people think.

What would life be like without that designer purse or the perfect boyfriend? Stop stressing and find out.

We all mistakes. Admitting that is the first step. Now take another and live life now.

KESWICK LIFE

Diagnoses: Uncomfortable

Saturday February 5th 2011, a rectangle room surrounded by white (or ivory) walls, six rows of ten chairs, a large desk facing us all, as we face each other. These are the surroundings of those who sit in the Woodbine Medical Centre in the small town of Keswick Ontario. A doctor’s office is seen by many to be a place to dread and avoid at all costs, but when we get sick we have no choice but to consult medical attention, which results in having to wait in the doctor’s office. This is not only a communal space we are used to in a large city like Toronto, this doctor’s office is located in what is considered today to be a small town. The way Keswick is constructed, populated and seen by city lifestyles are all factors in what defines it as a small town compared to larger cities, and this directly affects how this doctor’s office may be different from others (Rybczynski 35-50). Concentrating on how the space speaks will be focused around the objects affecting behaviours of the small town community, how the space itself affects our emotions and feelings, and why a doctor’s office has a feeling of conformity and normality when in truth most fear it more than any other community gathering. The doctor’s office is a space known by the world to be one of health, and safety, and as a small community we are connected more intimately, and in turn our space of health and safety differ in other ways.

Many behaviours and actions that are seen regularly in this environment are due to the objects and space that surround the people at that particular time. We have become so used to the normality of the space that we no longer see the strangeness, we are no longer able to see the space for what it truly is and how it speaks. The first thing I notice is that as every person walks into the main entrance they all observe those already sitting, maybe they are seeing who to sit furthest away from (the older woman with the heaving cough perhaps), none the less everyone sitting down is greeted with a thorough stare, it is not only the doctor who performs examinations. After each person has checked in and asked to take a seat that is when musical chairs begins. Interestingly enough you would think that most people do choose to sit isolated from the rest, but there are always odd people who mix up the normality of the environment. This translates from William H. Whyte‘s thoughts in the film The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces, and how a good town is able to provide comfort even with the presence of oddness. Other behavioral concerns that appear are those surrounding the dreaded magazines. They are in every doctor’s office as supposed entertainment, and they usually include last year’s collection of Reader’s Digests and some House & Home catalogues, none the less why is it that there is always an obvious competition for these golden magazines? When you really think about it, this is a health environment dedicated to keeping the small town healthy, and meanwhile they have us sifting through magazines that heinously sick people have been sifting through for years. This irony does not only apply to the filthy magazines but to concept of the doctor’s office entirely. We are all sitting within disease reach of each other and we have to wait in this small rectangular space for (as I calculated with 12 patients) an average of 35 minutes, all in all the doctor’s office allows us to respond in different ways, whether it is sit on the opposite side of the room or the seat closest to the magazines, in the end the objects and surroundings are what drive us to understand the behaviours taking place around us.

“Individuality [is erected by] the intensification of emotional life due to the swift and continuous shift of external and internal stimuli” (Simmel, 31). Our emotions and the way we feel in our surroundings are just as important to address as the way we behave. In the case of a doctor’s office we all have different emotions but for the most part they surround the same category. Fear can be categorized as fear for the unknown; we are all emotionally affected before we even walk in the door. We go to a doctor’s office for concern of our health and bodies, and this kind of emotional presence changes how we enter a room. Even the way the nurse calls your name, and what the doctor will have to say about your current situation is linked to why we feel the way we do. There is also the fear of embarrassment; no one likes to be poked and prodded to find out what’s “wrong with you” and in the end your emotions are specifically linked to the room, the space and the environment as a whole. The bland walls and neutral colouring are chosen to be calming and relaxing, but these surroundings do scream other things that can be giving us the feeling of unease. The closeness of everyone together is a comfort for most metropolis areas (Simmel 30-45) but in the case of a health vicinity the atmosphere of dense intimacy can be very unsettling. This continuously present uncomfortable feeling also connects to how we react to others in the room. “People do not converse in large public spaces” (Whyte). The neatly placed décor and shuffled magazines, and the blandness of the walls can be seen as triggers that make us think negatively towards others. We observe that the girl that came in after you have been called in first, and this not only upsets you but drives the nerves and fears that have already set in. Case in point that we are labeled as a small town, but we are trained to orient to the behaviours surrounding that label (Rybczynski 35-50). We are a fairly small town but that does not mean we must resort to sitting in a small rectangular space only inches from one another, but that is the way it has always been; white walls, identical chairs, no breathing room.

There are six rows of ten seats linked together, and an opposing row of two against the wall, each chair is dark brown in colour and is perhaps meant to match the drab walls and plain carpeting. The only décor are the many signs and posters of the potential diseases we are likely to get and how to treat them. The constant reminders of death and disease plaster the walls and once we read far enough to see that “It can happen to you” it should not be a mystery why people dread the doctor’s office. There are many places in a community that are focused around large groups of people coming together for a similar reason. The grocery store, bank, dental office and things alike are all examples of urban gatherings that could be compared to the environment of the doctor’s office, the main difference that appeals to my eyes is that we use the space as if it is so personal and normal to us but where we go to seek medical attention speaks to us in a very foreign language.

The doctor’s office is a space known by the world to be one of health, safety and safety, and as a small community we are connected more intimately, and in turn our space of health and safety differ in other ways. The way we interact with each other is blurred by the preconceived idea of what the doctor’s office space is like. We are all blinded by the stereotypical objects around us that we are unable to act differently than the rest of the people in the room. It is this kind of community space that shapes a small town to behave a particular way, and the way we feel about doctor’s is linked to the doctor’s office but in its entirety, the space is what brings us to our concluding feelings and behaviours. When it comes to following the leader, we are preceding the pattern by orienting to small town behaviour in small town spaces. The diagnoses of the doctor’s office is simple, before we get diagnosed we submit ourselves to the exam of others.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Fight for the Cure


Fight for the cure, and stand up for the weak. Give the gift of hope, and inform others on how we can beat this disease. There are so many ways to contribute to a foundation or cause, you don’t have to donate hundreds of dollars or give body parts. All you need to donate is your time and care. The Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation needs all the help it can get and its goal is to raise awareness and one day find a cure. This post is not to inform you about this foundation, when it was founded and all that other biographical information, this post is about why it’s important to me, and why it should be important to you. When it comes to my political engagement with this cause, it comes down to more than just politics. Being political will not find a cure, and as for my political engagement, is that the point? I consider informing the people I love that this is an issue, is as political as I need to be. I engage myself with this foundation because breast cancer is a disease that has hit close to home, and fighting that disease is an engagement I’m ready to step up for.

When life throws a curve ball, we can’t strike out. Leading a life filled with settling isn’t a life that I’m ready to live. Don’t settle for the problems and hurtles we may have to face; this activist project has so many support systems both political and social. Being a small part of both, is a small contribution, for a big cause. Chuck Klosterman is a man I have mentioned before, he is rude and honest and has no filter to his thoughts. In his book “Sex Drugs and Cocoa Puffs” he ends one captivating chapter with this line “That’s all I want, and that’s why I can’t have it”(Klosterman 12). He’s wrong. If this is all I want, to have engaged in a cause that helps me better understand my family’s struggles, then I’ll have it. No matter what gets in the way.

Works Cited

"Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation: About CBCF." Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation: Breast Cancer Awareness, Support and Charity. Web. 22 Nov. 2009. .

Klosterman, Chuck. Sex, drugs, and cocoa puffs a low culture manifesto. New York: Scribner, 2003. Print.

Culture Jam


Reach for the clouds, the sky’s the limit, aim high and dream big. Yes, aim higher than your arms will reach, and culture jamming attempts to go against mainstream cultural institutions or advertisements and aims to react against social conformity. There are many different advertisements that represent the reactions to certain ideas and ways of life. One that caught my attention was a poster to be put into local schools across Canada. The advertisement below just shows how some have an opinion about having commercials and advertisements placed in school facilities, and perhaps suggesting that kids are hypnotized and brainwashed into buying into certain things. In the book “Understanding Comics” by Scott McCloud, he talks about what images can mean, and what the words describing them relate to. In this advertisement it says, “Aim higher, campaign for commercial free schools” and if this advertisement had a sequence of pictures, it could tell a story of how this culture jamming phenomenon has to do with schools. McCloud once said, “If the words lock in the “meaning” of a sequence, then the pictures can really take off” (McCloud 159). He’s right, if the words of culture jamming have true meaning, it can really take off, and aim high.

Works Cited

"Culture Jamming -." Google Videos. Web. 22 Nov. 2009. .

"Culture Jamming." UW Departments Web Server. Web. 22 Nov. 2009. .

Mccloud, Scott. Understanding Comics The Invisible Art. New York: Harper Paperbacks, 1994. Print.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

The Consumer Matrix


Consumers. We all consume a daily intake of sources. We all consume a daily intake of reality, a harsh reality known as over-consumption. On November 25th, 2009 our culture will try and capture the attention of the world and put a halt on the over-consumers of this planet. The plan is to encourage everyone to buy absolutely nothing all day long, as well as turning off all appliances including your cell phones and computers. Do something different, do something for your planet. Park your car in the driveway and park your butt on the couch and reach out to the world, by turning off, tuning down, and living simple. The simplest things in life are of course “free”, but we will pay for our consumption with our lives. Marshall McLuhan is a man of many opinions about how the world adjusts to the new technologies of our world, and he once said, “Any approach to environmental problems must be sufficiently flexible and adaptable to encompass the entire environmental matrix, which is in constant flux”. If he is right, and our environmental matrix is constantly changing, our matrix will potentially fluctuate into something we can’t control. Let’s adapt to this cause, and be our own matrix.

Works Cited

"Buy Nothing Day | Adbusters Culturejammer Headquarters." Adbusters Culturejammer Headquarters | Journal of the mental environment. Web. 18 Nov. 2009. .

"The Playboy Interview: Marshall McLuhan." NextNature.net - Exploring the Nature caused by People. Web. 18 Nov. 2009. .

Neutralizing, the Net


NET NEUTRALITY


The Internet, WWW, Web, World Wide Web, computer network, data bank, data network, electronic highway, electronic mail, email, global village, information superhighway, information technology, online community, virtual community, virtual library, virtual reality. There is a mass amount of information flying around, and who’s to say that it is ours? And whether or not, it is here to stay.

The World Wide Web’s battlefield includes these main contenders: you, oh and those Internet dudes. The struggle to prevent net neutrality, the ability we have to control our web, will never come to a settlement, while certain problems are still on the battleground. Piracy, political information and copyright are some of the featured problems at this time. It is becoming harder and harder to define the term public, and easier to break the barrier of private. On one side we have the consumers, creating more and more obstacles to contain their private environment, and access others. On the other we have “them”, these are those who will do just about anything to stop us from owning our own web information. Why? You must be asking that question. Why would they want to prevent us from being our digital selves? Well, that’s simple. They want you to pay for your Internet, not to expand, but limit your access to the World Wide Web. Corporations want to be in complete control of your digital environment, or for some, your digital lives. Lawrence Lessig, the Internet enthusiast once said, “As the Internet integrated into ordinary life, it has changed things. Some of these changes are technical-The Internet has made communication faster, it has lowered the cost of gathering data, and so on” (Lessig 7). I disagree with this. We pay less for what we get, right now. But soon, will you settle with the fact that you will give more than you get? And as for our lives, as Lessig says, are they really all that “ordinary”?

Works Cited

InternetSecure. Web. 18 Nov. 2009. .

Lessig, Lawrence. Free Culture The Nature and Future of Creativity. New York: Penguin (Non-Classics), 2005. Print.

Warner has many brothers


Warner Brother’s describes themselves as “a fully integrated, broad-based entertainment company – is a global leader in the creation, production, distribution, licensing and marketing of all forms of creative content and their related businesses.” Warner Brother’s studios owns hundreds of other companies that all have to do with the entertainment industry, some include: Warner Brother’s pictures, The CW television network, DC Entertainment Inc, and any well known movie or television program you watch today. Not only that, but they have a chain of movie theatres across the globe. There are so many owners, and companies that it is hard to keep up with the ongoing development of the Warner Brother’s studios. They are a prime example of hardcore cross media ownership.

Media Hegemonies can take on an entirely new meaning when it refers to a major media company. Hegemony refers to the power of a single group that essentially leads and dictates the other groups of the same society, in other words; cross media ownership, and yes there are some benefits and “pros” to cross media ownership. But few include media growth. Let me explain. In the book Free Culture by Lawrence Lessig, he discusses the implications of piracy, but he also represents the insight into owning more than we can handle. “I have become increasingly amazed by the power of this idea of intellectual property, and more importantly, its power to disable critical thought by policy makers and citizens” (Lessig 12). When cross media ownership becomes a large part of a company, they become bias in all of their decision making, whether it is to cancel a show, or produce more of a certain product. Like Lessig once said “There has never been a time in our history when more of our “culture” was as “owned” as it is now” (Lessig 18). When it comes to crossing the media, why do we cross their ownership? We don’t, because most of us are unaware that when you deal with Warner’s, you’re dealing with all entertainment.

Works Cited

Lessig, Lawrence. Free Culture The Nature and Future of Creativity. New York: Penguin (Non-Classics), 2005. Print.

Warnerbros.com | The Official Site For Warner Bros. Web. 18 Nov. 2009. .