Thursday, September 27, 2012

In the Hippie School class last week, for a few days we talked about Personal Performance in Everyday Life, or something like that, which mostly means considering your dress and facial expressions and small interactions with people all the time, public and communal and private, and how these things are all part of how you express your intentions. Like, if you have a self-stated intention of encouraging people to make art, or wanting everyone to be joyful, or wanting to fix poverty, how are the elements you put together and call your Self working toward that? I haven't thought about this before: a lot of the interactions I have, I tell myself I'm doing the best I can, where mostly I try to be kind and friendly but feel shy and don't know what to say beyond surface greetings. That was my main critique of the discussion and the method: that it doesn't allow for shyness. And that is a thing that interested me. It doesn't allow for an explanation of shyness in our behavior -- and so what? If the way you're making yourself isn't leading to the outcome you have said you want, why not try something else? Maybe it'll sound obvious, but Just Try Not Being Shy is not a thing that occurs to me usually. It seems unfair to say to anyone, given the way we usually explain our personalities, but... well? But. I continue.

And then we had ten minutes to write some notes about ourselves: what we wear, how we answer the phone, how we think we talk. And to go backward, to look at the intentions a person might assume we are acting on, based on those views of us. And what I came up with -- now this is not entirely new to me but I don't like to think it explicitly because it makes me sad -- is that most of my actions are tailored to stay out of people's way, and to not force them to change their own intentions. I tend to agree with people in conversations, or to find some way for the talk to come around to mutual pleasantness. If I pass somebody on the sidewalk, I try to catch their eye to say hello, but if they don't look back I don't just yell hello at them; they might be busy and what, I'm gonna intrude on their life like a jerk?

And I got to thinking, maybe that mindset I have sucks. Maybe-definitely. Some people, notably some people I like and want to be friends with, literally like to be argued with. They look for it. They say what is the point of existing in society if you're not going to engage with people in ways that might feel uncomfortable? They say how do you ever make something new if you don't break something that exists?

All of which is not to advocate spending time with people you hate and who hate you, or scraping your knees just to see them heal, but... it's something there, I think. I go around hoping things will be blandly pleasant, that we'll all feel great about the way things are going, that I won't ever have to cry, and then I still do because I don't talk to anyone and I know that's not what life is for. And I should remember that growing and making and remaking is difficult and ugly and also necessary.

2 comments:

Kelly said...

IMHO:
*I don't think that mindset necessarily sucks. It's a tendency, and once you're aware of it, that knowledge is a tool.
*RECENT LESSON LEARNED: Sometimes those people who like to be argued with are wonderfully stimulating, and sometimes it's emotional abuse, whether intentional or not. I thought I needed to know how to engage with that in a healthy way, and later I decided nah, I had some strengthening up to do before I could tell the good kind from the bad.
*It's telling to be the shy person among several non-shy people. Sometimes it can be powerful as hell.
*http://rookiemag.com/2012/03/how-to-look-like-you-werent-just-crying-in-less-than-five-minutes/

Peel said...

Yes to all this. I mean, I have conflicting feelings. I had a crush on this one lady in thr group who was all about Big Meaty Discussions Where People Sometimes Get Mad and I felt invisible because I'm quiet most of the time where Meaty Discussions are, and it made me unhappy to sense that I wasn't contributing. I guess getting mad in that kind of activist-group setting is expected, encouraged, supposed to show that you care about stuff? Then again sometimes when you are real quiet for most of the talk you will say something eventually and people will think you are mad smart because you filtered out all the dumb things you thought about saying earlier. Then again sometimes you (I) will not say anything and then say something and it sounds really obvious and not engaged with the subject matter and you feel dumb. So I don't know. I guess I also worry about my quiet way because I'm aware it sometimes comes off as being a jerk, thinking I'm too good for this, I'm judging people, etc., when mostly I just don't want to look dumb and want people to think good things about me later on.

I love that article, esp. "Blow your nose lavishly." I fully cried in a bathroom at the Femme Conference, due to so many FEELINGS related to this discussion and also not. It was a confusing time. But I talked to one or two people in a good and genuine way (where all the facebook photos from the event/parties made me think I should be talking to like 534989 people, but whatever), so I'll try to remember that part.