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Showing posts with label email. Show all posts
Showing posts with label email. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Laughter: The Great Leveler

These pictures were floating around email for a while. My good friend with a goofy sense of humor sent them to me, and I all but forgot about it until last night when for some reason it popped into my head. Take a look, have a good hump-day laugh (it's Wednesday and a lot of these pictures are accidental humping photos), and let me know what you think.

By the way, the aforementioned friend is someone I've known since childhood (different from the friend mentioned in my recent blog, The Road Less Traveled). We always bonded over our shared sense of humor; enjoying the stupid and silly things in life. He loves the movie Kingpin, which you should check out if you haven't already seen it and you like crude poop and fart jokes and can handle some gnarly inferred sex scenes (you'll understand when you see it). Funny thing is, we have very different views on life now - he's a politically conservative, semi-judgmental Christian, Western Medical-model following, eat-anything-you-want-as-long-as-you-exercise type and I'm, well, not really those things. But I love him, and he compliments my way of life at the strangest times. Once he told me I'd be a great patient because I'm actually willing to change my lifestyle if my health and well being requires change. He's a doctor and told me that most of the patients he's seen a) want a pill to take care of their problems, and b) once they have said pill don't take it as directed anyway.

It's wonderful how laughter is the great leveler. Contrasting viewpoints, backgrounds, lifestyles and beliefs be damned! If something is mutually funny, the playing field is leveled and for as long as the laughter lasts, all of those differences melt away and there's just good old, roll around, side-splitting laughter.







In case you missed why this picture of the Queen is funny: Look closely, but cautiously, between the guy's legs, picture left of the Queen.







Sunday, February 28, 2010

Hello? The power of CONNECTING and how technology has changed things

Technology has changed dramatically in the past 50 years. It's easy to forget for anyone under age 35, since we were adapting still to the world while some of the most dramatic changes were occurring. But I'm reminded of how much technology has changed upon any technological interaction with my parents. I adore my parents. More than is probably necessary (as if that's calculable). But, like many of their peers, they are technologically challenged.

My mother checks emails on a daily basis and since she has been a good typist since just after suffrage, and just before computers, she has no problem with that. My father still creates graphs with paper, pen and a ruler. (A younger version of him would probably thrive on excel... Oh, wait. That might be me.) Anyway, I think I've received maybe 2 emails from my father, tops. He doesn't like to type nor does he type well. His primary use for the computer is to play solitaire, though ultimately I think he prefers real playing cards for that.

Aside from computers, my favorite of their techno-shortcomings is they way they use their mobile phone. For the first year of owning a mobile phone, my parents would first look at their ringing phone like they weren't sure it would really work. Then they'd press the answer button very carefully and distinctly. Next they would bring the phone to their ear and say, hello? with a significant upturn at the end of the word... creating a subtext that could only mean, I'm not convinced this will actually work since we're no where near a cord or rotary-phone and there's no operator on the other end of the line, but I'm just going to try it out to see...cuz my kids tell me it works.

While they've mostly gotten over the, hello? syndrome, they still are averse to most newer technology. Neither one text messages nor do they have any interest in a "smart" phone. Can't blame them on that one. The only reason I got one was because of work. I used to like being away from my computer when I was away from it...now I just regulate that by separating myself from my "smart" phone when I'm not actually using it.

Additionally, their aversion to technology makes me think about how technology has affected our lives. Certainly, lives have been saved due to mobile phones providing a link to people in danger or stranded (when they can get a signal, that is). Also, they have probably reduced the amount of murders of stranded motorists accepting rides from predatory strangers (though statistically these deaths were relatively low). I know from first-hand experience that they expedite work on television and film sets, however they also disturb things sometimes...ringing at inopportune times and causing interference with sound systems. But they also seem to have reduced our attention spans, and I think they've expanded the rift between teenagers and well...everyone, as it seems most teenagers have their heads down more than half of their waking hours - either texting, chatting or my/face-networking.

But here's the strangest thing for me. Our primary use of technology, besides for pornography, which still might qualify, is to connect. But we all seem more disconnected. This increased technology seems to have reduced our real, personal interaction. But maybe the sentiment was similar about the telephone... that it would decrease letter writing and the very intimacy, though somewhat delayed, that letter-writing provides in the thoughtfulness that usually goes into letters. I'm the only girl I can think of who actually exchanged loved letters with a recent boyfriend. For my female friends it's been over ten years for most of them since they've written or received any kind of hand-written love letter.

So, what's the conclusion? Barring some catastrophe (which some say is coming between now and 2012), I don't suspect things will change much by way of going back to older forms a communication. Nor do I necessary think they should. But we could all probably stand to look at each other in the eye more. Separate yourself from your mobile phone. Write a letter. Call from a land-line. You're much less likely to drop your call.

But mostly, please remember why this technology exists in the first place. To CONNECT you to people, whether new friends, relatives, acquaintances, or colleagues, who, like it or not, affect and impact your life, and you theirs. Remember this all comes down to CONNECTING.

And for goodness sake, call your parents...but let it ring a few times.




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