Friday 29 May 2020

Governments' Apology to Nature


Governments, churches and corporations are falling all over each other to apologize to whoever demands it. Is it some sort of self-help exercise -- admitting guilt to groups they have ostensibly harmed? 

If they wish to apologize for harm done, Government (and public bodies) should be apologizing to Nature:

Sorry Forests, for logging you
Sorry Ocean, for filling you with plastic
Sorry Soil, for stealing your water and covering you with concrete
Sorry Wildlife, for stealing your habitats
Sorry Birds, for poisoning you with pesticides
Sorry Fish, for genocidal fishing that's wiping you out
Sorry Whales, for stealing your fish supply
Sorry, Factory-farmed and Laboratory Animals, for false imprisonment and cruel treatment
Sorry Fur-bearers, for not outlawing leg-hold traps
Sorry, Human Children, for depriving you of experience of nature, beauty, and quiet private outdoor places 

We admit that in the pursuit of profit and ethics-free corporate alliances, and by irrationally ignoring conservation science, human psychology and animal ethology, we have trampled on everything that many hold dear. We promise to restore what has been stolen from other species, compensate victims, and hold ourselves to a higher standard in future. We ask for your forgiveness -- and hope you'll consider us in future elections.

Monday 25 May 2020

Education Comes Down With Absurdity-Virus.

Christmas seems a long time ago (everything pre-COVID seems a long time ago), but I well remember the dire annual Christmas warnings from lifestyle coaches and mental health experts who flooded the media with warnings about the "depression and anxiety" we we're suffering due to "seasonal stress". These experts fell all over each other giving us tips for "survival". What a relief to find when it all died down in the new year that we had survived. How glad the mental health Cassandras must have been to have a new bundle of warnings to issue, when by late February COVID had raised its crowned (corona) head. 

With
the lock-down phase came a whole new raft of stresses: isolation, loneliness, financial anxiety, boredom, fear of the future, fear of coming within six feet of others ... Then, the schools were closed. Now they're partially re-opening, but unfortunately the stress-and-anxiety industry is telling parents (and kids) to be fearful and worried -- because it will be "different". 

Telling kids they can't survive something being different, that they're allergic to change, is a recipe for emotional enfeeblement. Tell the kids they'll be fine, and they will be. The desk is in a different place? The hours of attendance have changed? That's not a reason for mental breakdown. But of course to say this is to reveal uncaring insensitivity toward … whoever. Yet someone has to mention the un-mentionable: stiff spines, bravery under bombing, and so on. (You want stress? Ask a WWII survivor.)

Some of us are old enough to remember when kids always lined up at the school door before entering. (Remember not running in the halls??) Being told by a teacher that something's going to be done differently never used to be a reason for a nervous breakdown. Teachers ran classrooms, and students didn't have a daily meltdown when told what to do. Those meltdowns are more contagious than coronavirus, that's for sure. Just see one and the next kid catches it (copies it).

Sitting in rows of desks at a distance instead of clustering around a table for "group work" was routine in the old days, and kids learned to work independently, not to mention to spell, use a pen, read books and do math. A therapist in the emotionology trade recently announced on CBC radio that schools during the COVID partial re-opening must practice "emotion-focused learning". That is code for no learning, or for learning to whine about feelings like the adults around you do.

It would be more reassuring for students to look outside themselves, to study a subject other than "feelings". How about … Geography! Learning where mountains and oceans are, and learning the capitals of ten countries a day. Or history! Memorize the kings and queens of England since 1066 (okay ... of Israel, India, Morocco or whatever ethnic place you favour). Learn how many moons Saturn has, how many substances appear in the Table of Elements (and what an element even is …).

The post-pandemic "new normal" in Education is to avoid the "old normal" of disinterested knowledge. There was already fear that knowing stuff is a privileged, elitist and colonialist affectation that marginalizes those who need to tend to Self due to stress and anxiety. If you shrug and turn your mind to impersonal study, well then you're just stigmatizing … someone.


Whether new or old, the word "normal" comes from "norm", a geometrical term for an exact angle, such as a draughtsman needs to know. A right angle is the norm because there is only one measurably correct right angle. The word "correct" is linked to rectitude of course, and implies standards as well as exactitude, and is therefore not a concept people feel comfortable with. It's not "emotion-focused" or marginalization-concerned. (Interestingly, teachers used to graduate from what was called "Normal School", meaning a college upholding established standards in skills and knowledge.)

But
sarcasm aside, it would be helpful for kids to focus on math as something inarguable, measurable and reliable. If they're bobbing around on the sea of adult emotionology, something impersonal and outside self could be a life-raft. They won't be scared of germs, of school, of every minor change in routine, if we don't tell them they should be.



Saturday 16 May 2020

What's So Bad About Being Marginalized?

Politicians, publishers, spokespeople and advocates of all kinds try to rescue the "marginalized". Congregating tightly in pursuit of an apparently high-minded goal of inclusivity, they've made a big new centre. Observing this, some people prefer to stay on the edge, outside the fray.

Some margins seem nicer than the middle. A middle is an undifferentiated blob. The mainstream's a deep river you could drown in. Margins are more defined, tentative, subtle and geographically interesting.

A margin is the sandy shore beside the sea where the messenger birds drop hints. It's the grassy verge along a highway, a strip of green standing out against the concrete-grey. It's the white space on the printed page surrounding the text where you pencil in your own ideas. It's the vantage point at the theatre from which you scan the whole room. Take advantage then of a good position. 

"It's often true that those who sit in the wings can see more than the players," said Nellie McClung. 
If you've been "marginalized" then, don't be too quick to give up your space. 









This story is reproduced from LITERARY YARD, www.literaryyard.com, 2024/02/10 It's a common fairy-tale theme -- imprisonment in a tower ...