++++ 3/12/2024 ++++ ** Cue eerie music. All that is in shot is some waves bubbling over. ** This goes on a while. Then narrator starts: | Modern society has created a situation where direct | experiences of life have become diluted and dulled. | This has occurred through mass media and the excess | use of technology. We see the world through screens | instead of directly through our bodies. Because of | this our senses have become dulled and under | stimulated... I'll stop the quoting there [1]. The text comes from a video on the cryptic promotional site for the book The Wander Society by Keri Smith. I take the book to be fictional account of someone finding out about a secret society that many authors have been part of through history. Others have taken this as a real account, which perplexes me, but in any case if you do indeed have a cynical bone in your body you have to make sure you are in the right mood to read the book, which gushes in a way few works of art do any more. (Maybe the ability to actually feel things is what happens when you get out of the clutches of the System? Maybe the problem isn't how much you emotionally react to something, but rather what it is your reacting to? And thus maybe the common defense strategy of trying to feel nothing but coolness is modernity's curse [2]... And I'll note that coolness is still a feeling. It is comfort in that comes from being high enough in a social hierarchy). Back to the opening quote and that bit about modern society having left our senses dulled and us under stimulated got me to thinking... Aren't we also overstimulated? After all the social critic John Michael Greer -- once 70% brilliant and 30% crackpot, but since 2016 has left the ratios reversed -- crafted the acronym for succeeding in the post peak-oil future of L.E.S.S. Less Energy Stuff and Stimulation. Well, I think both Smith and Greer and right in this regard, but they are talking about slightly different things. Greer is talking about how we are overstimulated by the tricks that have to be used to make boring things able to hold us [3]. Here's a few of these techniques: soundtracks, rapid camera cuts, changing the color scheme. All of these are ways to jerk and distort reality that hit your brain's processing as micro jump scares... Imagine you were in the middle of the woods, just relaxing as you look at the pattern of lights moving through the branches when everything morphed both in shape and location, the color scheme shifted to red and there was a noise of "waa waaaa." You'd the very least pay attention. You'd probably be terrified the first time it happened. But if it kept happening, eventually you'd get used to it. And then younger generations who didn't know a different would just take that as reality. So we are overstimulated in terms of context shifts. Which, again, are tricks to hold your attention. That is the power TV has to make so you can't just look away [4]. We have stacked on top of that hacks into attention using social proof and semi-random rewards, but I am starting realize those later two are part of a proper, flourishing human life; they just have to be directed differently. Artificial context shift, on the other hand, is optional and too likely to be used for harm rather than benefit. But Smith is right that we are under stimulated. On the level of senses, most do not get enough feeling with hands or the rest of the skin (breezes, warmth, cold), not enough smell, or even taste. But those could be taken care of by technology or the spending of money, I suppose. But what technology without cultural change can not stimulate and what the vast, vast majority does not get enough of, is one: connection and two: beauty without agenda. ==== [1] Actually, I'll keep going, as it is good script. | this is not what we wish for as our reality. What we | really long for, what we've always wanted is to be | deeply connected -- to people, to the world, and to | ourselves. Society has given us an image of what we | should be experiencing as humans, of what we should | have, of how we should feel about our lives. | This image is propagated through the use of Spectacle: | television, films, advertising, etc. It has nothing to | do with the true experience of living, or the wants and | needs of he individual, the needs of the soul. We are | craving a life outside the commercial world, derived | from direct experiences, not second hand representations | of reality. We are craving a life that is free from | constant distraction. We are craving the freedom and | timelessness we felt as children. | There is an answer to what we crave. http://www.thewandersociety.com/TWSvideo.html [2] See Infinite Jest, if you want this laid out obliquely in a massive, non-linear tome. Also the book has... a lot of other stuff. [3] The etymology of the entertain renders the meaning hold (tain, tener) between (enter), though my dictionary chickens out and renders this "hold together." No, no entertainment is not the like integration > integrity. If you don't get feeling that the attempt is to hold you in, then what I wrote here probably isn't for you. There is a scene in Infinite Jest that plays with this etymology, but it is so obliquely done that I don't think it would be a quote that would easily fit. [4] Greer offers the trick of counting each time you have a camera cut. By doing this not only are you giving yourself a distraction, but it breaks the flow the narrative (if there even is one), allowing you to see how empty it really is. === This work is hereby in the public domain. Do what you want with it.