Wednesday, August 22, 2007

i need an interpreter! STAT!

the world is full of languages. there's that great story about the tower of babel, where all the people were together and couldn't understand a word the people around them were saying.

personally, i rarely run into this type of issue. i live in minnesota, and although there is a TON of diversity here (we boast the highest level of hmong-americans in the states) i scarcely ever run into issues with language.

i will freely admit to the exception of my hearing, which really needs to have subtitles at all times. case in point: earlier two teammates were discussing an issue. the comment was made that someone would "back up" soon, in relation to sides of the building and a person. i was really confused because i thought they said that the person had hiccups.

so mis-hearing things is a BIG part of my daily life.

i rely heavily on body language to get through the day--if i do not understand the words, if someone cannot enunciate, etc--then it becomes vital that i am reading their body and face well enough to keep up with the conversation.

emailing, unfortunately, is open to so much interpretation that it's painful, and none of it relies on anything but little ol' me.

long ago i learned the hard way that you cannot read ANYTHING into an email--you have to feel out the sender if you need more explanation.

during the workday, while you're sitting at your desk/cube/in your car/wherever you work, you are already dragging around the stress of work. you're annoyed because you had to leave the warmth and familiarity of your own home, and come in to a chilly office that surrounds you with the soft shade of gray and the gripes of a thousand souls.

so when you get an email that could be taken in a variety of ways, all of a sudden, the outlet appears.

i know this happens because it happens to me all the time, and it happens with everyone i know. my sister sends an email, my aunt, my father, my friends, my coworkers--and i read it and interpret their emotions, their feelings, their opinions, and it swells like high tide. before i know it, all the ugly that i have been schlepping around for the past week--at home and now at work--all of it pours out, and i see those words, and i react in a manner that perhaps i would not if the person were standing in front of me.

i know i have said things in emails that i would probably never say in real life, simply because the object of my anger is not sitting beside me, to remind me that i am speaking to another human being. i'm sitting in my gray cage, being angry, and replying with angry words because it's an angry kind of day.

if it happens, i want to deal with it, which is why email is a boon and at the same time, a horrible, horrible medium.

emailing facts is one thing--"it is 75 degrees outside and sunny here."

emailing opinions--"i really did not like that salad you made for dinner last night"-- is a horse of another color.

yesterday, i had enough of the angry.

it has only been 21 days since that bridge collapsed. years are in between me and the death of dan's brother, of my aunt, of cari's mom. but it all is so sudden, and i need to keep that in mind. i would not want to be gone tomorrow and have the people around me think, "she died hating me" or "i never got the chance to talk to her about that issue."

i am old enough to want to just nip things in the bud and move on, and live life instead of pussy-footing around the issue. it takes up too much time and energy, both of which could be better spent elsewhere--cuddling with my boyfriend, playing catch with my kitty, writing and re-writing the half-assed novel with which i've been noodling.

in the end, the end happens too quickly.

yesterday morning i went and found my copy of epictetus--this is obviously a modernized version of the original. epictetus, if anyone wonders, lived way back in nero's day (the guy who was violining when rome burned). he was born a slave and a cripple--unable to be anything more, in that time. luckily, his owner sent epictetus to school alongside his own son, and eventually emancipated him. he became a well-known philosopher, but eventually was exiled for being a philosopher.

he's one of the original stoics, and taught marcus aurelius at one point. i ought to read "the art of living" more often; the first page alone was so perfect for the situation that i will post a bit of it here:

"Happiness and freedom begin with a clear understanding of one principle: Some things are within our control and some things are not. It is only after you have faced up to this fundamental rule and learned to distinguish between what you can and can't control that inner tranquility and outer effectiveness become possible.

Within our control are our own opinions, aspirations, desires and the things that repel us....

Outside of our control, however, are such things as what kind of body we have, whether we're born into wealth or strike it rich, how we are regarded by others, and our status in society. We must remember that those things are externals and therefore not our concern. Trying to control or to change what we can't only results in torment."

3 comments:

dan said...

i love that word. Noodling.

:)

alison said...

This is what an eating disorder does to a person: I read your entire post, marvelling (as always) at your ideas and emotions and how well you can articulate them and the way you put words together, and still all I could think of when I got to the end was "Is that comment about bodies a little dig at me?"

:)

ombren said...

it is definitely not a dig at you dear girl!!! (: (: (:

and yes, noodling--it is a most excellent word. (;