When we write online, we are like birds calling in the wilderness so our own kind will know us. But we should be careful not to go more than half way towards meeting whatever approaches as a result, and be prepared to withdraw at once if what we have attracted seeks to take advantage. There seems to be no way of inviting exclusively those birds of a feather without automatically attracting the wrong sort as well: the predators.
When we call into the wilderness, we tag our writings so others who share our ideas might find us. But the predators take those tags as indicative of our habit and try to hit us with some sort of service. But I am from the Old Testament era of the Internet, a time when its promise loomed large, and it had more to offer than mere shopping. Therefore I find the predators annoying in their crassness and think their growing domination and their souring of this wonderful mind-space space an utter abomination.
In response to the last blog I have received advice on how to make money online, was offered beauty products, lifestyle advice from teenagers, and budgeting advice from spivs. There were also genuine responses, easily discerned from the fake, and as ever I thank those most valued birds of a feather for being the icing on the cake of my wordsmithing. But in general, our bird-calls mainly flag our position to the hunters who ready their guns seeking to fell the money from our pockets. And in hardening myself against predators, in learning to evade them, I find I mistrust every advert that comes my way online because I suspect I have been clumsily profiled. I resent it and find it creepy. As a self-publisher though I have no choice but to operate in this territory. I suppose then I’ve become quite the snob, seeking kinship exclusively with my own kind while being infuriated to a comical degree when the predators hear my call and respond by showering me with their shite. Those Victorian men of letters, contributing piffle to “Blackwoods” never had this problem.
As a young engineer, many years ago now, finding my feet in a huge and, at times, terrifying manufactory, I once had the privilege of working with a crusty old curmudgeon in whom I confided my utter bewilderment at the oftentimes Byzantine processes required to achieve the simplest of things, also the long hours we spent in meetings, discussing ‘policy’ without actually achieving anything. And he told me that in engineering, all there really is is cutting metal, that the rest is bullshit, that we should never lose sight of that one key fact, then all would be well – at least with us – and we would not go crazy.
It was good advice, advice that has served me well, and which can be applied metaphorically and usefully to many areas of life outside the metal-cutting business. But in a society that has de-industrialised it has also become impossible not to conclude all there seems to be left now is the bullshit, and no more so than with the online world where nothing tangible ever existed in the first place.
It’s therefore disappointing when you put up a piece of work to which most of the responses are from snake-oil entrepreneurs. It’s not disappointment that so few birds of a feather hear my call, more perhaps that there seem to be so few genuine wild birds of any feather out there at all. It’s as well then that of all the species, I am the least gregarious, and therefore well suited to the environment, happiest in small company. I am an albatross perhaps, or a stormy petrel.
It’s a very big ocean we are crossing, and meaningful encounters are naturally rare. True, the ocean has also become a sterile environment, thick with dross and boiling with fatuous nitrates, a fact we birds of a feather recognise only by our detachment from it and we lament its loss. Everyone down there is trying to profit at the expense of everyone else, it is a place of predators and prey like worms in a bucket where everything is a baited hook, and even imaginary concepts like “lifestyle” have their price-tag.
We follow the styles of the celebrities, ape the decor of their homes, dress the way they dress, even pretend we are celebrities ourselves with our Insta-profiles. I suppose I’m no different. It’s just that my styles are a couple of hundred years out of date. I am all frock-coat and pince-nez. I am a pocket-watch and leather-bound journal, grimacing at modernity.
Krishnamurti had much to say about such faulty thinking. Basically, he said, the world was never in trouble before we came along, and even we were fine until we started over-thinking everything, that it is our oftentimes corrupt thought, our ground-level delusions that are at the root of all suffering. It begins with thinking, and ends with killing. So, dear snake-oil entrepreneur, before you respond this time with your spam you should take time to read what I’ve written, observe the tag-traps I have set for you, then you’d realise your hits on me only become a part of the meta-structure of the very thing I’m getting at, and it’s thus I profit instead from your avarice.
But each to their own. So you keep your nose to the ground, Mr Entrepreneur, sniffing out your grubby coin, always an eye for the easy buck, weighted by your petty ambition, while we true birds of a feather spread our wings and soar.
Squawk!
Enjoyed this enormously. When you talk about the snake oil salesmen, we have a problem here in the US, don’t know if you have it in the UK. Unsolicited sales calls. Yuck. They have increased in number astronomically and there is no depth to which they will not stoop. A new one is “this is the call you requested about our new back brace” I guess they assume that people are so demented they have no memory of whether they requested a call back or not, It is becoming so outrageous that five or six calls a day is common.
Take care.
Cheers
Pat
Hi Pat,
Yes that used to be a big problem. A while ago we brought in a thing called the Telephone Preference Service. If you registered with them it stopped most of the cold callers who were supposed to check with the register by law. Sometimes they find ways around it though. A big problem we have right now is with lawyers ringing wanting us to put in a claim for an accident we’ve not had. It’s a nightmare when they get your mobile number – now I’m blocking any number I don’t recognise and every few years changing my phone sim. It doesn’t feel like progress and makes us all cynical.
Glad you enjoyed the piece.
Best regards
Michael
I do not know if you have ever read Pershig’s “Zen and the art of Motorcycle Maintenance”.
A brilliant life changing book for many people.
It describes the author’s discovery of where the ‘Arete’ philosophy of the Greeks descended or at least changed to the Socratic endless analysis of the material world.
Of course the search drove him ‘insane’ and he had to agree to become normal or else they would continue with the electric shock treatments.
Society swapped ‘Courage and Duty” for “Fear and Greed” it is sad but true.
Those who can evade the ‘norm’ are few and hard to find.
One usually sees them walking alone in deserted areas and paths (figurative or literal) and they are happiest when you just nod and pass on.
They are thinking and contemplating, a dangerous occupation, it makes one dissatisfied with what one sees or has.
” Ideas are more dangerous than guns, we never let average people walk around with guns, so why should we let them have ideas? ”
( Josef Stalin )
The 99% agree with the concept “Greed is good” asking “Why is greed good?” is an act of insanity.
Thoreau in his book Waldon (Life in the woods) lived in a dirt floored cabin. A friend offered him a carpet to make his life more comfortable. Thoreau declined saying :
“If I have a carpet, I will feel obliged to take care of it, cleaning and beating etc. the time I have to spend doing those things is time I could be reading and contemplating and writing. I would prefer to read and think, thanks anyway.”
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“Most of the luxuries, and many of the so-called comforts of life, are not only not indispensable, but positive hindrances to the elevation of mankind.”
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“When he has obtained those things which are necessary to life, there is another alternative than to obtain the superfluities; and that is, to adventure on life now, his vacation from humbler toil having commenced.”
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“This spending of the best part of one’s life earning money in order to enjoy a questionable liberty during the least valuable part of it reminds me of the Englishman who went to India to make a fortune first, in order that he might return to England and live the life of a poet.”
To learn to live at peace with what we need and not that which we are induced to desire, is to gain both maturity and peace.
Of course such advice or adages fall under another of Thoreau’s observations :
“I have lived some thirty years on this planet, and I have yet to hear the first syllable of valuable or even earnest advice from my seniors.”
I do know “Zen and the Art”. I read it at a time when I was starting to feel that existential hole opening up in my life, and I found what I was looking for first in Pirsig. He was a valuable milestone and you remind me I still have that book, that I should rescue it from the oblivion of my garage before the mice made their beds of it. I should also read it again in the light of what I’ve learned since as I’ll probably grasp more of it next time.
I don’t know Walden, but it pops up repeatedly in the lonelier places of inner reflection and I’ve a feeling I’ll be making my acquaintance with it shortly, as several correspondents have mentioned it now.
“Spending the best part of one’s life earning money in order to enjoy a questionable liberty during the least valuable part of it”,… that rings a bell of course, as it must for most people, the world having found a way of turning the natural desire for relationship and family into a tyranny that keeps our noses to the grindstone for the best part of our lives. How do we escape it, other than by remaining single men and taking to a cabin in the woods like Thoreu? It sounds idyllic though. My own escape-cabin’s in the garden, but I can only hope the house it’s attached to hasn’t already taken the best part of me.
That said I’m planning to quit the day job next year, when I hit sixty, become the hippy I know is in me somewhere, or at least in so far as my good lady will allow. The remunerometer indicates we’ll be nearer “getting by”, than “enjoying an affluent retirement”, but as long as I can think and walk and write, and not starve, I shall be a happy man. Hopefully then I can avoid my latter decades being the least valuable of my life. An old motorbike would help of course, but the accident statistics for born-again bikers are not encouraging.
Best wishes
Michael.