Personal

Personal reflections, comments about things I've been doing, etc.

Projecting Onto Means of Communications

There are no accidents, but sometimes a cigar is a cigar.

I’m on a mailing list that recently has had some communications problems. People have written emails to test if the list is working and have responded in various ways. Others have talked about their feelings when messages are not responded to. I wrote an email to the list sharing some of my reactions to the discussions there and this is a version of that message adopted for my blog.

I've been fascinated by some of the discussions on the list over the past few days and thought I would add another one of my typical, out of left field, responses.

When it comes to text based computer mediated communications, people often comment about the disadvantages that a lack of non-verbal cues presents. On the other hand, some argue that having just text makes it a much richer environment for exploring projections. I've been fascinated by this viewpoint and always enjoy hearing discussions about this. Yet it struck me this week, that there may be projections not only on the words, but on the form of communications itself.

This line of thought started as I wondered why we have these various bursts of "Test" messages. What are they really all about? Are they reflecting some sort of need to stay connected in this world that seems increasingly connected via online communications? Years ago, I would not have expected to hear from people in Austria and Australia. If by some chance, I had established a connection like that, I suspect that a delay in communications of a few days would be less likely to be noticed. Before the days of air mail, a letter would take many days to make it half way around the world. A delay of a few days would be unlikely to be noticed, and I would also suspect that I would have been more likely to expect messages to get lost in transit. I probably wouldn't have sent a letter back saying "test". Now, if we don't hear something we quickly suspect something is amiss and often quickly become frustrated.

I've also found, especially in my younger years, that if someone did not respond to me, I quickly assumed it was because of some flaw of my own. People didn't respond because they didn't like me. Yes, I struggled a lot with my own insecurity when I was younger, and perhaps it comes back to haunt me today. When I send an email to the various mailing list and get no response, I am still perhaps more likely to assume it is because I said something stupid, than to assume it is because there are problems with the mailing list servers, or perhaps even, that it is because other people on the list are really busy with other things. Yes, I want my words to be more important than server problems or other important things going on in my friends’ lives. The same applies to my reactions to no comments on my blog.

As a technologist, I have made mistakes adjusting settings on servers and made it difficult for people to get their messages through. Perhaps these were accidents. Perhaps they were the result of me being too tired, distracted or inattentive to make the correct serve configuration adjustments. Yet at the same time, to the person wondering why they haven't gotten a response to their emails, it may be because of mistakes by me or other technologists and not a reflection of some character flaw of the person sending or receiving the email. The undelivered email might not be an accident, but it might not be a cigar either.

When technology doesn't do what we think it should do, it might not really be telling us anything interesting. However, or responses to problems with technology may be very rich material to explore to learn a little bit about ourselves.

Thoughts?

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Easter

“Watch the field behind the plow turn to straight dark rows
Put another season's promise in the ground”

I recently stumbled across a quote about farmers and hope. I don’t remember the exact words, but it was something about farmers living by hope as they place a seed in the ground. I think Stan Roger’s great song, ‘Field behind the plow’ captures some of this.

For me, New Years and Easter always seem to be the two big holidays where we talk about hope. New Years talks about the hope for the coming year. It is a man made sort of thing and comes in the bleak winter when hope seems most intangible. Easter is different. Easter is about hope in God’s love for us and comes as symbols of that love come bursting forth from the tomb and from the barren ground.

So, we sit at our kitchen tables and celebrate gifts that remind us of this vernal and eternal hope.

“So ease the throttle out a hair, every rod's a gain
And there's victory in every quarter mile”

Happy Easter, everyone.

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Egg Flags



Egg Flags, originally uploaded by Aldon.

Holy Saturday. We colored eggs and went for a hike. One of the ideas we had this year was to try and color some of the eggs like national flags. Can you tell which egg is supposed to be which flag? Read more to see what the flags are supposed to be.

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April First

Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, Maundy Thursday, April Fool’s Day. It seems hard to know where to start, but I’ve decided to again start with the childhood invocation of good luck. It seems like a lot of us could use a little good luck right about now.

For April Fool’s day, I haven’t been up long enough to find any great pranks yet, but I’m hoping to find some good ones soon. On the other hand, I’m not currently planning any pranks. The closest I’m finding is the first release of MeeGo. We’ll see how good, or how much of a prank that turns out to be. In other technology news, I’ve started tweaking my site a little bit. Specifically, I’ve started adding code to make some blocks on the side appear only for certain types of stories. It makes the site more complicated, but hopefully, it will make it a little cleaner as well.

Then, there is Maundy Thursday. For Christians, it is the remembrance of the Last Supper. It is generally thought to have gotten its name from the mandate to Christians that we should love one another as Christ has loved us. How does this related to experimenting with new software? Playing pranks? Our politics? Our work? Our life in general? This is something each of us needs to work out, perhaps even whether or not we call ourselves Christians.

Perhaps if our politics and our business ethics returned a little bit closer to the call to love one another as Christ loved us, we’d have a much different political and economic climate right now, and perhaps few of us would be feeling the need to resort to the old childhood invocation for good luck.

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What Kind of World Do You Want? - Learning to Fall

Last night, I received a Facebook invitiation from Dan Navarro to a Cyber Listening & Viewing Party to Raise ALS Awareness!. Dan Navarro and Eric Lowen are fantastic musicians that Kim and I have often heard at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival.

Six years ago, today, Eric Lowen was diagnosed with Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. Over the years, we watched him go from walking with a cane, to riding around in the mud of Falcon Ridge in a wheel chair and finally, no longer performing with Dan or being able to physically attend Falcon Ridge.

Through all of it, he has continued to be an inspiration to all of us and wrote a great song, ‘Learning to Fall’. There is a video of Eric and his friends performing this song a couple of years ago that was set up as a fundraiser. So, today, take a moment off from the celebrations of St. Patrick’s Day and watch Learning to Fall. Then, join the Cyber Listening & Viewing Party to Raise ALS Awareness event on Facebook and spread the word.

Thanks.

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