Other procrastinatory finds:
- 52 tips for happiness. Not quite - oh who am I kidding - EXACTLY as new-agey as it sounds, but makes good points. Also, the key to dying happy.
- A blog by a med student who dares to say he hates it. I likes my humour like I likes my chocolate: dark, bitter and Jewish. (what?)
- PostSecrets, an oldie but a goodie. People baring their souls on postcards.
- Another medblog, The Underwear Drawer by an anaesthetics resident, the third Asian female doctor type on my blogroll. She's a caustically hilario writer and comic-artist and by the sounds of it a brilliant doctor (an Ivy grad iirc) and also the mother of a kills-me-with-the-cute 2yo bubba and the wife of a dashing opthalmologist. Doesn't that sentence alone give you an inferiority complex? Curse these overachieving supermoms (somehow supermum doesn't sound right).
Nuffa that meta crap. The phrase that's been rolling around my cranium for a while is this: "nudge the world". I thought that was my own, by the way, til I Googled it and found that in fact that it had been implanted in my brain by Tom Stoppard. I always suspected he ruled the universe. It's from Henry's cricket bat speech in The Real Thing, where he's talking about the power and beauty of language, how words strung in the right order can change minds and even the world. Which I believe is true, but also a teensy tiny bit snobbish because in the play he's talking about how the other dude can't write to save his life. What I believe is that even words strung in the wrong order can be Archimedes' lever or his place to stand on or however that probably apocryphal quote goes, cos it's the concept that matters. Nowadays the power of the your average Joe Blow to nudge the world is unprecedented. The internet for one. If you make a YouTube video that strikes exactly in that sweet spot of popular interest, you can move, inspire, entertain (or more often, disgust) an audience of tens, hundreds of thousands by mere word of mouth. And it doesn't have to be a complicated idea either, as the Free Hugs guy shows. The world is nudgeable in so many ways. Sure, one person influencing geopolitics and climate change is a tad tough (though not impossible), but even a concept like PostSecrets...I can't put my finger on why I think it's so powerful, something to do with empathy and common vulnerabilities and connecting strangers. And look at Wikipedia, wow. What a batshit and revolutionary idea that was.
Beyond the internets, I have fewer examples but I still believe in the force of an idea, no matter who it comes from. Say you're struck by inspiration and tell your step-cousin-in-law who tells a friend who knows a parliamentary aide who tells the Prime Minister about it in his lunch break...who knows, nations could shift. Actually, my own papa has nudged the world, though not by dint of a single blinding idea, but by sheer dogged determination. He's probably one of the most effective agitators in the entire diaspora for democracy in VN and for the welfare of Viet refugees (yes there were still Viet refugees in limbo even in the naughties - how many decades after the war?). He's gotten people out of detention centres and that's not even his day job. So from creating a blog with a premise that touches people, to lobbying ministers and media, there are endless possibilities for anyone with a shiny idea and/or passion and balls.
The next obvious question is if anyone to nudge the world, what can I do? It's frustrating and tantalising. I think....dammit, I know that I'm not a half bad pot-banger. The problemo is finding The Idea and The Cause. Operation Fanatic and Operation Dr Quinn didn't quite fit the bill. The former taught me a shitload and gave me confidence that I could take an idea and run with it and I had a ball, but its scope was severely limited. It was ultimately a passive exercise. The format still has potential though: a newsblog is a powerful thing, distilling and filtering information at a time when attention is a scarce resource. As for the latter, it's an idea I can get behind because of its sheer obviousness, but honestly, the issue is hardly the closest to my heart. So...what? That is the 64 million dollar question. I'm sleepy now so will ruminate on this later no doubt, but for now let me turn the question to the audience. You there. Screw the Queen of Jordan: how can you - or we - nudge the world?
1 comment:
Hey
I get what you mean about phrases sticking in your head- esp Stoppard's. I found myself quoting the most obscure, meaningless line from TRT the other day "We will go and it will be done". I haven't even seen it, only a clip, but Jennifer Ehle's voice is tattooed in my brain.
Meanwhile, honey, you're a writer. Even a columnist. Duh brain, but hard to know where to start, right? Especially with being gifted enough to do anything and being part-way through medicine.
I feel privileged to being able to read your personal diary :)
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