Title: | What's all this fuss about 'sax and violins'? |
Notice: | Archived V1 - Current conference is QUARK::HUMAN_RELATIONS |
Moderator: | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI |
Created: | Fri May 09 1986 |
Last Modified: | Wed Jun 26 1996 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1327 |
Total number of notes: | 28298 |
This article seems all the more appropriate now, after that previous topic (743). Found this in the student newspaper put out by the Massachusetts College of Art a while ago, and just recieved the author's permission to post it here. (Hey! Is that a first? Article posted WITH permission!) Taken from her letter: "Feel ABSOLUTELY FREE to disseminate my essay in your office, on computer networks,... WHERE EVAH!" If anybody should wish to contact the author, you may reach her through US Mail at: Holladay Weiss C.E. Dept Mass. College of Art 621 Huntington Ave Boston, MA 02115 Also, if lots of response is generated, I shall ask the various authors if I may forward their responses to Holladay. jonathan
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744.1 | ANT::JLUDGATE | Wigan | Fri Apr 21 1989 16:50 | 120 | |
On FUN and Related Topics Does it seem like things are worse than ever? Walking around the city, watching the immortal tube, listening to people talk, does it seem like we live in an awful time? Whenever pernicious ideas take hold in any era it's common to see them as part of the natural order of things and the predictable results of past events. Rest assured, however, the weird time we live in and the _bizzare_ people who run our country are not _natural_. There are critical people who write about the times of course, and in the transition from the wonderful now defunct Reagan era to the wonderful Bush era we have just begun to endure, some of them have assessed the economic and social effects of the misguided and dangerous policies of the past 8 years; the news of course is bad. More people are miserable, more are down and out than people in America have been in quite a while. A shrinking number of people are hoarding a greater and greater share of whatever good things we have left, and through it all self-satisfaction and materialism have reigned supreme. The future seems to hold nothing better (if there is a future). Originally I intended to discuss the age of self satisfaction, which shows no sign of ending, and the evils of materialism. These things are occasionally discussed by other people however. We've all heard of those great polls that tell us exactly what growing percentage of college freshmen hold earning lots of money to be their cheif aim in life and how they tell their befuddled teachers (poor, worn relics of the 60's) about the stock portfolios and BMWs they want to acquire preferably within 6 months of graduation. It seems more useful, however, to point out a related, but more obscure, rarely discussed phenomenon. That is of course, _the_strange_ _disppearance_of_fun_. Look around you. Think about life today. Fun disappeared a while ago and hasn't reappeared yet. Yes, it's morning in America once again, yes there are plenty of jobs for everyone. But who could have imagined just how boring morning would be? I began to realize fun was hard to come by while considering the exciting extension of life the radical conservatives have granted us. As we know, as our elected officials all know, _life_now_begins_at_ _conception_. As a woman, naturally this news was of personal interest. It must have also been great news to black men who learned recently that their life expectancy has _fallen_, while everone else's rose. With the extension of life black men will probably come out even, if not ahead. With all this extra time I began to consider leisure and fun. Hobbies, vacations, things _to_do_. It was then I noticed fun had pretty much vanished to be replaced with work, work, work, and not only because we've all said _no_to_drugs_ for once and for all. Our interest in dull, grey, monotonous work wouldn't be so peculiar except that in an era of intense materialism one would think fun would naturally go hand in hand with buying expensive cars and food, luxury condos, fancy vacations (that precious 3 weeks in August), goods, goods, goods, and children other women gave birth to. This is not to say that individual slobs don't ever have _any_kind_ of fun. Even the grimmest, most ruthless yuppie on Wall Street drowns their sorrows once in a while or goes on an occasional ski weekend. When it does appear however, fun is less of an activity than a symbolic somthing to be purchased. Cars, comedy clubs, music clubs, expensive restaurants, bars, movies, sports that require lots of equipment, vacation homes, shopping. We know it's fun when the tickets cost $18.50. When I say fun has vanished I'm speaking of fun and leisure time as a collective goal and a value. The perfect example of commerce masquerading as fun is the expensive car the person of today supposedly slobbers over. On the tube, in magazines (the only 2 things that count), owning the BMW or the Porsche is cited time and again as proof that the _good_life_ (whatever that is) has been attained. So what _does_ this person of today want to do in the fancy car? It's hard to know. No one talks about travelling in them or learning about how they work. No one wants to have sex in them or even keep them for more than a few years. They seem to be as useful as a 2-dimensional ad in a magazine as they are in the garage... _AND_ their main function is really carrying their owner, cursing and complaining through 45 minutes of bumper to bumper traffic to and from work. Boring old work. The only thing less popular than fun is its close relative _leisure_ _time_. At least fun can be purchased in two or three wild uninhibited hours on Friday night at the old watering hole. Leisure time means doing what you want for hours, and once you start doing that you might not stop for six weeks. Neither fun nor leisure time will ever be spoken about by George Bush or any lesser political figure, anyone in the mainstream media or anyone in the educational system from Kindergarten to Medical School. If we ever asked, but of course we never do, these people would all proclaim the great importance of leisure time in our lives, spending time with the family, going to the county fair, etc. In fact those in authority regard leisure time as much like vitamin K, necessary in tiny measured amounts to keep us alive, but hardly of any greater importance than that (people like George Bush admittedly don't have much leisure time themselves; they've replaced it with power, which is fun for them, if not for us). The authorities of any age, it should be acknowledged, are never fond of fun. Ours is not unique there. It's the Joe Averages that seem different, they've given up on fun too. It's odd that in times when work is so all important so few people seem to care it it's rewarding or interesting or not. Why does the person of today, and not just money hungry yuppies but all different kinds of people, the person a thousand generations of our ancestors toiled to produce seem content to get suited up each morning to sit at a desk and move papers from one side to the other, back and forth, to fax them from one side of the country to the other, to Federal Express them to Europe and back without ever caring what's on them, or how dull this transfer of funds and papers really is. So finally at the end of the day this person, and you can be sure this includes a lot of art persons, can go home and smugly perch on their pile of stuff (art persons have the really tasteful stuff), and that's it, that's the good life. The papermoney mentality makes the frontier mentaility look pretty good. So what can we do? First we can define what leisure time really is. For most of us it's the time we have to lead our lives when we're not doing tasks at the behest of others. If we're in school and we like doing that, it's a few years we spend before we _start_ doing tasks at the behest of others. In other words since we're not immortal it's all the time we've got. So why, I scream, in the richest country in the world, can't we take a _few_more_hours_off_?? What can we do? Spread the gospel of sacred leisure time. When someone says they want "a good job" look puzzled, say "What's that???" Insist on an interesting job for yourself (good luck). A long time ago people used to think about _how_to_live_, we can try reviving that process. Try not to have a dull life. Try to think. When someone asks you what you need or what America needs say: "More leisure, more time to think, more fun!" author: Holladay Weiss reprinted with permission of author | |||||
744.2 | About fun...as such... | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Sat Apr 22 1989 15:53 | 60 |
Hmmm... An interesting view. It made me contemplate the times I have had fun lately. Having done that, I found: I had fun yesterday. A friend of mine at work [wonderful long haired, bearded giant...] and I took my small person [8] on a walk at lunch time. Mom carried goose food and discarded hats and jackets while they romped through culverts and fed birds. And we talked about everything under the sun and guessed one-minute mysteries back and forth. Sometimes we raced; sometimes we meandered. All the time was spent enjoying the sunshine and the wind and each other. It wasn't very long I guess, Larry had to get back to work and so did I...but it didn't seem *too* short at the time. It seemed nice. And I had fun last week playing guitars with a friend. He rattled my cage about singing some old goodie an octave too high; and I razzed him about using three fingers to pick with instead of two. It was lazy and muddled but warm none-the-less. And it too was not very long, but it was long enough it seemed at the time. And I drive a Mercedes. And that is fun. She hugs the road and searches her way through the gears in a determined way; power just beneath the surface. She seems a quiet, purring beast until you let her out on the highway and you realise she is loping along somewhere over 90 without so much as a shimmy. I spend inordinate amounts of time in my Mercedes; I choose to live in the country and work in the city. She gets me to and from in grace and style...and that is fun. I hate to admit this, but I have been known to have fun at work. There is, of course the rush of a piece that comes out close enough to perfect to pass for it. And there is the rush of having the boss think you are the best thing since sliced white bread. But most of all, there is the rush of "delivering" the goods to a packed room of people; the "show"; the "hype". Hmmm...that is fun! After I thought about this....it occured to me that perhaps the operant word is "attitude" not "fun". Almost anything can be fun approached from the right "attitude"... [Well...almost anything...four or five things come immediately to mind that are not fun under any circumstances I can come up with...but you guys knew what I meant?...Didn't you?] Anyway...I liked the essay...a lot. Made me think. Melinda | |||||
744.4 | Was it as good for you....? | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Sun Apr 23 1989 18:01 | 7 |
Now Mike....*I* had fun the other day... Didn't you???? [grin] M_ | |||||
744.5 | DLOACT::ZIPP | The back side of the Mobius strip... | Sun Apr 23 1989 23:24 | 1 | |
... why does there seem to be more here than meets the eye...??? | |||||
744.6 | Observe The Outside World | FDCV10::BOTTIGLIO | Some Teardrops Never Dry | Mon Apr 24 1989 09:20 | 33 |
I enjoyed the essay, fine piece of writing - BUT - my personal opinion - the author should leave Academia and dwell in the real world a while. Yes - there are many who don't know how to enjoy life, how to enjoy leisure time, recreation just for recreation's sake - but then there are many who know how to reach out for enjoyment. Whenever I travel on vacation time, whether it be a cruise to the Caribbean or a tour in Europe the number of fellow travelers just out for a good time is very impressive indeed. The social circle I share with consists of many people of ages ranging from their 20's to senior citizens - Square Dancing. Just out for enjoyment, fun and recreation abounds. The number of people involved nation wide, is overwhelming. When attending plays or symphony concerts with other friends, the crowds are omnipresent. I understand where the author is coming from, there are many people today who have forfeited the recreartional aspect of life for materialistic status-seeking, and there are many people whose struggle just to meet their survival needs leaves little time or energy for recreation. Those who look to work as more than a means to earn the wage necessary for their financial needs are well depicted in the essay, but we Americans are not all like that - far from it. There are many of us who work to live rather than live to work. Guy B. | |||||
744.7 | FUN?? LESIURE?? | ANT::MPCMAIL | Mon Apr 24 1989 10:24 | 14 | |
FUN?? LESIURE?? True these are hard to come by and even harder to make room for in my life. But I know from past expierences that I must take time for myself each day to do one just one thing I really enjoy just for me! I can now do it without feeling selfish. I find that when I walk my mile, that although I hate those stretching exercises that when I get out there I enjoy every moment or when I take Samantha out of her cage and put her on my shoulder when I do housework it is fun! Life has tought me that different people have different ideas of what is fun and what to do during lesiure time. There is no right and no wrong. Lisa | |||||
744.8 | [chuckle] | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Mon Apr 24 1989 13:49 | 6 |
RE: .5... There is almost *always* more than meets the eye...Hmmm? Melinda | |||||
744.9 | re: -.1 | BSS::BLAZEK | Dancing with My Self | Mon Apr 24 1989 14:41 | 2 |
The keyword here is "almost". | |||||
744.10 | OK...I'll come clean... | HARDY::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Mon Apr 24 1989 17:43 | 15 |
.9... Yup. you're right. I am engaged in some leg-pulling. Mike and I had a rather heated Mail discussion going on another topic. [grin]....It turned out to be rather enhjoyable arguing with him.... [sigh] Such a let-down? Yes? [chuckle] Melinda | |||||
744.11 | reply to the ambiance | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Mon Apr 24 1989 21:54 | 10 |
in re .10 yeah, but anyone who hasn't met Mel has missed a unique and special experience :-) ....that could be a lot of fun. :-) Bonnie hi Mel | |||||
744.12 | I would never pull a leg! | CSOA1::KRESS | Certified Member of the Dream Team | Mon Apr 24 1989 22:06 | 9 |
re .10 Melinda, Personally, I can't imagine *anyone* disagreeing with you. Some people really have their nerve, don't they? It's a good thing that I know better!!! ;-) hahahahahaha!!!!! Kris | |||||
744.13 | hi Mel | SKYLRK::OLSON | Doctor, give us some Tiger Bone. | Tue Apr 25 1989 17:28 | 5 |
re .12, (*chuckle*) DougO | |||||
744.14 | I'm blushing.... | SUPER::REGNELL | Smile!--Payback is a MOTHER! | Tue Apr 25 1989 17:46 | 14 |
[ahem] It would appear my reputation precedes me.... [And before Steve Mallett can jump in with a snide comment....] Hi all! And thanks for the cuddle....it felt good. hugs Melinda | |||||
744.15 | Still looking for blacky... teehee... | CASV05::SALOIS | don't go around tonight... | Tue Apr 25 1989 21:05 | 9 |
.14 [ahem] Melinda, your reputation is renowned, dear! Why wait for Mallet, when I can take a shot...?? hmmmmm??? Gene~ |