Tag Archives: Coursera

Do you not know me?


sticky-quotes_080912_what-you-do-for-a-living-does-not-interest-me-i-want-to-know-what-you-ache-for-and-if-you-date-to-dream-of-meeting-your-hearts-longingwtmkIt’s a line from Moll Flanders, by Defoe. A book from 1722, yet the question is still valid.

Do you not know me?

Who does know another person? Sometimes I wonder if we all wander about, selves packaged in different boxes, pulling each section out depending own we are with. It’s not that we are dishonest, exactly, more that different parts of us fit better with different people. So who can really know us?

I’m taking an excellent Teaching Company course with the brilliant professor Arnold Weinstein. I’ve taken other courses with him, through Coursera, and he is such an impressive speaker and he understands and interprets literature so well I had to purchase this version from the TC (thanks Marie-Danielle for telling me about these people!) Weinstein dissects treasures of literature: Moll Flanders, Bleak House, To The Lighthouse, Proust, to name a few. He brings in humanity, the what if of the characters and the writers, not in the “analyze the green light at the end of the pier” way of high school, but wrapped in his knowledge of the times. He has a few gaps. He assigns to Moll an avarice, without saying anything about the grim status of women at that time if they did not have money. And of course, he relies rather heavily on male writers, but that is the way of things.

The best thing is that he brings universal themes into the discussion of the books, and makes me think about them. Thus the wondering about being known.

Coincidentally, I’m also reading a graphic novel, “Are You My Mother?” by Alison Bechdel.(The brilliant founder of the Bechdel test!) It, too is all about being known. About how it is only in writing that we end up actually defining ourselves, or others. Whether we write in journals (note to children: should I die, burn before reading), or stories, or lists (as in the very creepy Walt, by Russell Wangersky), we reveal ourselves best, I think, through the written word.

Alas for relationships, we rarely share those words, instead relying on speech and actions, those malleable things, to let others know who we are. True, we are what we do, but our motivations – ahhh, those are a different kettle of fish, often known only to us. And perhaps that’s a good thing.

We can figure them out, but it requires acute attention, a rare thing. I once knew someone who studied me, got to know me so very well, read my mind almost. It was unsettling, though I was grateful someone had finally seen behind my screen.

But I am comfortable, partially shielded, and knowing that is part of knowing me, too.

Do you not know me?

Staying connected, or spaghetti junction


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Staying connected is becoming more complicated, not that that is anything new. It seems that I am always looking for charging cords or trying to keep up with my Coursera courses or squashing magazines into my brain between novels or madly reading everything including cereal boxes while simultaneously emailing my friends and colleagues and keeping track of Facebook. I listen to podcasts while practicing my ukulele, playing with my birds, and planning a conference. It’s madness and I can feel my brain fibres spinning out like Medusa’s head snakes, equally cranky and writhing.

It’s too much and I notice the stress is showing, as I become more scattered. I feel a bit like one of those over tasked electrical outlets, starting to get hot and sparking now and then. Not quite ablaze, but getting pretty damn close.

It’s time to take control, organize my brain, stop the endless distractions, I tell myself.
And yet – the connections to the world are important. I need my contacts to push away my existential loneliness, to shrug away depression, to enlighten my life. Time spent with friends is vital, learning equally so. I must have new input to keep moving – like my electronic devices, I need a current in to keep producing out.

So I’m revisiting Morning Pages to sort out my thoughts. And I’m using a very good visualization a counsellor gave me – every night I sever all the ties that bind and connect me, and go to sleep. The next morning, I reattach those connections that I want to keep for that day.

Today I have a few re-attachments to do, but I’m going to try to be focused. Got things to do. But let me just check FaceBook quickly…

Sulking towards enlightenment


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It seems oddly appropriate that I am spending countless hours reading and listening to the words of old white men in the month where the Roman Catholic Church elected a new Pope. I have my doubts that enlightenment arises through the overwhelming administration of the Church, but there’s always hope.
And it’s interesting, from a female perspective, to read about Socrates and his gang, men all, who debate the issues of the world while, no doubt, the women around them cook and clean and raise their children and fix their sandals and sweep the ground they tread upon and generally speaking, run the world.
I’m not saying there isn’t good stuff in their discussions, that they don’t have fascinating perspectives on morality and such – but at the same time, these educated men treated their women as slaves, drones, property. It is hard for me to appreciate the one without hearing the undercurrent of the other.
It reminds me of the Confederate South in the US, going on about how to live properly while standing, elegantly booted, upon the necks of their slaves.

So on I read, trying to absorb the discussion, while hearing behind it the murmurings of my ancient sisters and wondering how on earth one can discuss morality as a concept while living such an amoral life.
Oh yeah, I get it now – you merely redefine it to suit your needs.
Sadly, we don’t seem to have evolved past that, even these many years later.