UNTITLED
(because I can)
(because I can)
| One of my latest paintings. |
When my brother and I were in Elementary School, we had to
study hours each day during summer, reading history books, watching science
shows, practicing multiplication tables all far above our age level. Our
science projects were sometimes too complicated for teachers to understand, and
certainly far too complicated for my brother and I to fully grasp. And we had
to do “touch typing” every day of the summer on one of those really old
Macintosh computers where the screen was the size of your hand.
I was taught to say “by negligence” instead of “by accident”
when I was 5 years old. Which was
then turned into a lesson about how comprehension is situational, since my
Kindergarten teacher didn’t understand me when I kept telling her I did it “by
negligence”, only because she couldn’t imagine that a five year old would
actually know this word.
In high school my father and I fought a lot since I, like
most teenagers, was far more interested in my social life than anything I was
learning in school. When asking
him for help with my homework or to study for an exam he would always force me
to start at the beginning and spend WAY more time on projects than anyone
else. Not to mention that ASIDE
from schoolwork, I still needed to do EXTRA studying in the house, including at
one point, watching a movie on the history of trigonometry (something my father
watched for fun). He even
had me spend months studying note cards to prepare for the Baby Bar Exam (which
I never took). And in college
he read my text books recreationally and insisted on testing me any time we
went 5 minutes without talking; while driving, at a restaurant, on the
phone...
Everything my brother and I did was always turned into a
lesson, whether we were in a hurry or extremely uninterested, according to my
dad it was a necessity to take time to learn…and still is to this day.
My full name, if I haven’t mentioned prior, is Seren
Cleopatra Aspasia Moran. No, not
joking, that’s the name on my driver’s license. Why you might ask? Because of course this was yet another
opportunity to teach a lesson, a lesson from birth. He wanted both my brother and I to know whom the most
influential men and women were in history. (My brother’s name is Michael Socrates Ulysses Moran.) So of course, I knew who
Cleopatra was and how to spell it before the age 8. And Aspasia, if you were wondering was Pericles’s mistress,
someone to have supposedly greatly influenced him in ruling Greece during the
Golden Age.
I don’t think it’s a surprise to say this can be a real
nuisance at times, and exhausting to say the least. But it hasn’t all been
bad. I have to assume that my
father is to thank for why today I type an average of 80 wpm; why (aside from a
lot of unmentioned side stepping) I got my GED at 16, studied at a city college
at that time, and then continued on to get my diploma finishing my last two
years of high school in 6 months; why I learned how to play bridge at the age of
11, (and still love and play regularly today); why I joined the chess club at
my University; why I (a studio ART major) audited a Plato seminar for graduate
students my sophomore year in college reading the Plato dialogs at age 19; why
I have a better understanding of the law and my rights than, to be honest, most
people of any age, and perhaps even part of the reason that aside from my art I
have chosen an additional career path in teaching.
So, with that short background history of my childhood and
my father, it should be no shock that while being 23 years old, living in a
foreign country, he still sends me several emails a day of articles and the
matter that he either thinks I will be interested in, or, more often, things
that I ‘need to know’. (He probably wouldn’t like that I put that in
quotes). I must confess that even
having grown up with him, it is still difficult for me to find the time and
motivation to read or watch the news (yes I know how shameful that may
sound). But I don’t really need to
worry about that too much, since I will certainly be emailed with anything of
great (or even not particularly great) importance.
Admittedly, 99% of the time I don’t read the emails. At the most, if the subject line is
interesting I skim the article.
However, last weekend I happened to, somewhat accidentally read one of
his emails entirely. The subject
line: “Why Does Apple
Inspire So Much Hate?”
(http://www.cultofmac.com/172428/why-does-apple-inspire-so-much-hate/)
Now, this would certainly not normally come under my top 5
list of interesting subject topics, and in any other circumstance this email
surely would have gone unread and immediately dropped in my “Steve” folder,
waiting to perhaps someday be read.
However, it just so happened that last Sunday was the end of
a four-day weekend in result of a Brazilian holiday. My only plan for Sunday was to paint all day, which was
unable to happen because of the break in at my school, which is of course
extremely unfortunate in many ways beyond just me not being able to paint.
But after offering my assistance with the school, my Sunday
was left wide open and free.
Everyone I know here was busy and Daniel was obsessively studying for
his finals this week, while constantly interrupted with business calls. I have already helped him as much as I
can with his homework, considering it’s in Portuguese. But I did proudly type up a bunch of
his notes and homework, since I type faster than him even in Portuguese, and
was a great way to learn how to spell in Portuguese. Anyway, I figured I would take the time to have a lazy
Sunday, eating exotic Brazilian fruits in bed catching up on TV shows I never
find time to watch.
While I was waiting for the final episode of my TV show to
load I saw his email. I figured,
what the heck, even though this wasn’t particularly an interesting article to
me, why not take a look anyway.
Now I’m pretty sure my father would be disappointed to hear
that of all the articles he sends me about the environment, politics, economy,
human rights issues, health, philosophies, technological advances, and the
rest, that the one article in months that I actually read all the way through
was about why people hate Apple.
(I’m also aware that this was a very long explanation as to why I read
an email, so I apologize.)
While beginning the article I was still uninterested in the
subject, but rather uncharacteristic of me I read further. I don’t consider myself someone who
feels particularly emotionally attached to my having an Apple computer, but the
article was surprisingly well written and engaging.
Mike Elgan, the author of this article was discussing how
Apple advertises itself as not only being a better computer but presents the
idea that the PEOPLE who use apple computers are actually smarter, more
sophisticated, creative and innovative PEOPLE. Something that of course makes non-Apple users angry. While
reading this, my first reaction was that this was absurd, and that I in fact
did remember their commercial depicting the non-Apple user as this fat old guy,
but that I of course in no way shape or form actually have any judgment about
non-Apple users. However, the more
I began to think about this the more I realized that I’m not so sure that is
accurate.
I was reminded of my first month here. I had broken my
charger to my Apple laptop which here costs, used, R$120 to replace, something
that costs $5 US dollars on Amazon.
I was struck by how expensive it was, and by the fact that there isn’t
even an apple store within a two-hour radius of this city. I remember my first thought being
“welcome to a 3rd world country”. I didn’t think anything of it until reading this article. But, truthfully there was certainly a
small part of me that subconsciously made some (very inaccurate) connection
between intelligent and sophisticated people using Apple computers and
Brazilians perhaps not being this way since they are not accustomed to this
brand. It wasn’t just about money
but a judgment about ignorance.
To add to that, last week, a British man who is now another
teacher at the school, came in with the new 2012 Mac book. Realizing that that was the only other
Apple computer I had seen here in brazil, I remember making that same
connection. Something I find incredibly shallow and disturbing.
But unlike the purpose of Elgan’s article, I am less
interested as to my judgment about Apple or non-Apple users, as I am about how
much advertisement influences us, without even knowing it. Of course what brand of computer you
have has ABSOLUTELY nothing to do with your creativity and says nothing about
your personality except perhaps a few small preferences. Yet I was subconsciously making this
assumption, which made me think, “My god, what else am I out there unfairly and
absurdly thinking without realizing it?!”
It isn’t that this is the FIRST time I have realized that we
are all manipulated by advertising, but it was just a troubling reminder. I mean all these advertising companies
are sitting around getting paid (a pretty good amount I might add) to pick
through our brains of what society says is right, cool, pretty, best,
“sophisticated” and then makes money off finding ways to manipulate us into
believing it and then of course purchasing. You have the argument, well that is
free speech, that is business, that is sales, that is life. But I mean does no
one else find that a little sick and frightening? Does no one else think that perhaps we have gone a little
too far? I mean do I have no
freedom to protect my mind from such subconscious manipulation?
A few months before I came to Brazil I watched a movie, Trust. It’s a really well done movie actually,
unsettling but very good. It was
about a 14 year old girl who is molested and raped by a man in his 40’s. The story is of course more
complicated, considering she agreed to it and what not, even though you really
can’t hold her accountable.
Anyway, the father of this 14 year old girl in the movie
worked for a big advertising company. As the movie showed all these traumatic
things happening to his daughter and how she got manipulated into this
situation and how devastating it was for the whole family. Showing how actually quite easy it is for
this to happy to all young girls and how impressionable they are. But all the while, you see him
designing these advertisements, of what exactly? Well, extremely skinny and
made up young girls dressing sexy and promiscuous portraying women of far more maturity. Of course paralleling the idea that, as
devastating as this was for him to see this happen to his daughter, he too is a
contributor to the impressionism and insecurities so many young women have.
Now, I am of course not suggesting that someone working for
an advertisement agency is to be blamed or charged for a molestation and rape
caused by a 3rd party.
But I AM suggesting that while Apple computers’ advertisement is not
nearly as harmful but still found a way to sink into my brain, so do so many
other far more harmful advertisements.
And as a woman in particular, I certainly feel victimized by the
portrayal of beauty pressed upon society, and the many other absurd ideas that
are pressed upon us.
And this is something we are all at least to some extent
blind to. I mean I consider myself
rather observant and unaffected by advertising. I buy my clothes at thrift stores, I don’t pay much
attention to brands or what is “in style”, I don’t know most celebrities names,
or the singers of most songs I like, or care what rating a movie gets. But the truth is no one goes
un-affected. If you hear something
enough, by enough people, a part of you will probably start to believe it.
And with technology, although of course there have been
unarguably incredibly great advances; there have also been harmful ones. I remember Daniel’s first week in San
Diego. He mentioned that he was
getting a headache from all the billboards and flashing advertisements. I was quite surprised to hear that
actually. He said he just felt
bombarded with them and that it was overloading and exhausting. It was still hard to understand since
not only did it not bother me, I didn’t even NOTICE them. But not consciously noticing them
doesn’t mean I don’t inherently absorb their messages.
Now, aside from my little society is killing our originality
spurt, there was something else Elgan mentioned that inspired some
thoughts. Not so unrelated as it
turns out. At the very end of the
article, he mentioned why hate gets created to begin with, suggesting that in
fact Apple creates hate because Apple creates love. Arguing that “love and hate are not opposites,” that the
opposite of love and hate is actually indifference.
Reading that sentence inspired a strong flashback to my
Political Science professor my senior year of college, Michael Stoddard. He was actually a visiting lecturer
from Oxford, and taught me more about politics than my 22 years before his
class.
He was the first person I heard suggest that the way we look
at politics is all completely wrong.
That we have, what he called a “linear view” of politics, labeling
people as “leftists” and “rightists” as if we all exist on some imaginary line
going in either direction. His
point was that this linear view is completely wrong because the extremes of
both sides, Nazis and Communists for example, are not opposites at all. That in fact, both extremes are very
similar, and that the opposite of these is actually balance. We could all learn something from both
sides. He suggested that we change
the way we think and begin characterizing politics within a ‘circular’ view, in
which both extremes would meet and the balance would be on the opposite side. And I happen to agree with him.
I am constantly frustrated with the way people see politics
that if I believe in gay marriage that I must then also be against the war in
the middle east…as if those two are at all related. I mean you can most certainly be conservative on issues and
liberal on other issues, and even part and part within the same issue. (Of course Stoddard would suggest that
we abolish the terms of liberal and conservative altogether, but for the sake
of explanation I will keep them here).
I can’t tell you how many times I hear people talk about how they don’t
agree with a politician because they don’t like the politician but not at all
mention what he is actually saying that is wrong. By all means hate the guy, but can we talk about the real
issue? Can we discuss what he is
saying about immigration or foreign policy, and just for one minute forget that
he cheated on his wife or whatever else, since while we can judge that if we
want, it has nothing to do with immigration. Can we think for ourselves and decide what is right and
wrong without having to belong to a certain group or category? I’m not naive enough to think it is
this simple, but I do believe we can make a stronger effort.
So, my point? That I love Apple computers and anyone who
doesn’t have one is old and stupid and is still thinking linear just as they do
in politics. No I’m totally
kidding. But I do think that there
is a certain aspect of originality and individuality that is getting lost in
society more and more each year, especially as technology grows. Not something we need to
find for the sake of “being original” because that is just as annoying and
destructive, but for the fact that we should work harder at pushing away
advertising pressures and political ideologies. And try to
perhaps create something that, whether popularly agreed or not, is healthier
and better, and most importantly is what we REALLY think, regardless of other people.
I also realized that I haven’t been writing as much in my
blog since I found out that I actually a good amount of readers. This somehow
made me feel like I could no longer use this as a journal and now needed to
“prove” something, once again somewhat consciously or subconsciously concerned about what other people think. Or that I somehow needed to have a very specific limitation and theme for this blog, only talking about traveling or just art...Which of course I don't, and in fact being an artist and living in Brazil does not mean that is all I think about. So here it is, my father’s lesson once again having an
effect on me in one way or another. I look forward to hearing what he thinks of this one :)