Day 208: Two Ears, One Mouth

Another one of my posts didn’t publish last night, and I have a working theory about what’s happening.  One of the things I really hate is when people refuse to take responsibility for their actions (like, I don’t know, say, refusing to admit one missed a flight that took off at the appointed time – at least he had a creative story?).  That is not what is happening here.  I am responsible for checking to make sure my blog post publishes, and I haven’t been doing that.  I have been clicking “publish” and moving on to the next thing, whatever that may be, without bothering to check, even though it would take approximately two seconds.

Still, I have a theory about the root cause.

A few weeks ago HW got a new computer, and I think it’s stealing my Internet.  I know, that sounds crazy, right?  It seems like when he’s using it, the Internet on my computer is slower, and it started around the time he got it.  I probably sound like Donald Trump, but at least I admit I don’t understand how the Internet works.

I was thinking today, while driving, of course, about how writing can transform past experiences and wondering whether it shapes future ones.  Writing regularly about the things that happen is a sort of outlet, a way to express whatever we feel about any given situation.  Taking the time to do that, especially every day, or almost every day, provides an extra opportunity to look back over an experience, to consider it from another perspective, or, I suppose, to cling even tighter to the original perspective.  I think when we do that, there is a good chance we remember the original experience through the experience of remembering it in order to write about it (I am not, at least here, expressing an opinion about whether that is a good or a bad thing, or even pretending I understand exactly what that looks like).  As I was driving, I wondered whether that very process, the looking back over an experience, considering it an extra time, putting thoughts and feelings into words to stare back at us, changes the way we think more fundamentally.

I wonder whether people who write a lot naturally become more observant, and necessarily, more quiet.  If we know we will have the opportunity to express our thoughts and feelings later, in a calm, peaceful environment, where we have time to order them in some way, maybe that would make us less likely to express them in real time.  Maybe our focus would shift to observing and remembering our experiences rather than fully experiencing them.  Again, I write all of this without any kind of judgment, partially because I would have no idea whether to say if it were good or bad, even if I were interested in doing so.

Would I be more likely to pass up an opportunity to speak now, in order to hear what someone else has to say, so I could digest it and write about it later, adding my own thoughts only after mature reflection?  That would be one way to gain an upper hand in any argument, for sure.  If, instead of actively discussing an issue, I simply listen, take mental notes, and later on dissect and respond as I write about it, that gives me a certain advantage.

All roads ultimately lead back to The Real Housewives, in this case, of the New York variety.  During the first season Carole Radziwill was on, she was sort of this nice, pleasant, fairly quiet character.  She did a lot of listening, nodding, and polite smiling.  But when it came time for her to do the confessions, or whatever they call it when the housewife sits down in front of the camera and talks about her experiences, she was hilarious(ly snarky).  When the other women saw the clips they were surprised, and one of them even said something about it at the reunion.  She was accused of being two-faced, or something along those lines, but I wonder if that’s fair.

Obviously I’m not comparing my writing to her writing, but I wonder if the difference between how she behaved in person, versus how she behaved on camera after she had an opportunity to reflect on what happened in person, could be explained by something along these lines.  She was a journalist, and is a writer now, and maybe after so many years that kind of thing just comes naturally to her, to sort of experience whatever she is experiencing, process it, and react to it later, in private.

I don’t know many other writers to draw any definite conclusions.  I have a friend who blogs, but in a serious way, and I would say I think she does some of that.  I think if most people met her in person, they would never guess she writes the way that she does, or, to put it another way, in person she is very sweet, kind of on the quiet side, funny and fun, but very, I can’t find the word I’m looking for, but fairly passive.  When she writes she is much more direct, and I think it’s fair to say she doesn’t pull any punches.

I doubt many people would say the same about me, but again, I am not a serious writer that way.  For me, writing is a hobby, a tool for growth (eww), something I do for fun.  On the other hand, I think a lot of what I write would surprise most people who know me, for different reasons.  Sometimes, for example, I think I am a lot more vulnerable in my writing than I am in person, and probably more measured.  This may be just another variety of the same, because it is still a difference, indicating that writing is some kind of safe space that allows me to be different than I would normally be.

For a post that started with a conspiracy theory about my husband stealing my wireless capabilities, that took an interesting turn.  I’ll write more tomorrow, HW and Foyle are waiting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Day Twenty-One: Confessions, Part I: RHONY (Be Cool)

I started this post thinking it was going to be mostly about girl friends and girl code, but things took a turn when I tried to explain my strange enjoyment of bad television.  If you are not interested in reality television, feel free to skip this post.  I do not plan to hide any gems of truth.

Only a few close friends, my mother, my husband, and I guess anyone reading this, know about my love of a certain kind of reality television.  I remember when reality TV first became really popular with shows like Survivor and The Bachelor, and I even remember before it was really popular, with shows like Road Rules and The Real World on MTV.  I admit I watched a few episodes of The Real World for two or three seasons, but that was about the extent of my interest, and I actively disliked the more popular versions on primetime television.  My mother loves everything from the fun and excitement of Dancing With The Stars to the dark and horrible Dateline, and I just don’t get it.

Most people assume I’m just a snob and either don’t watch TV at all, or only watch PBS Newshour, or Downton Abbey, or something like that, or only watch weird documentaries or artsy things on premium channels.  And that’s right, I do sometimes manage to catch a few minutes of the PBS Newshour after the kids go to bed, and up until last season I was caught up on Downton Abbey, but most of the time our television is switched off.  I read most of my news on the computer, in part to avoid at least some of the bias, but mostly to avoid boredom and to save time.  We will occasionally watch a show on primetime, for example, The Goldbergs, but usually we lose interest fairly quickly.   And maybe it because I’m a snob.  It seems like most of the shows on primetime are some version of the same thing, over and over again, and I just don’t see the point.

Nothing I’ve said so far would surprise anyone who knows me, even on a very casual level.  You know what would?  I love to watch The Real Housewives.  All of them.  I started the habit in law school, and was so embarrassed I hid it from everyone for years.  But there it is.

I started soon after the very first season aired.  They were running a marathon and I was twenty-two, single, and nursing a hungover.  This was back when my life was SO busy I could only sleep until noon on the weekends because school was so demanding. Poor me.

My aunt had mentioned the series to me because some of her friends lived in the development where they filmed.  I was curious when we spoke about it, but forgot about it until I stumbled on the marathon.

I watched the first few episodes and probably ate cold pizza, drifting in and out of Sunday afternoon slumber, and thought, “Wow, these are real people.”  Which should really be typed this way:  “Wow, these are real people?” and “Wow, these are real people!”

I pretended to watch the shows ironically for a while, but eventually admitted to my husband I actually really like the show.  I’m not going to analyze why I like these shows.  Maybe they make my life seem more normal, maybe my mind just needs a break sometimes, maybe I’m like one of those weirdos slowing down to leer at a car accident.  Whatever.

Back to my husband.  He doesn’t like to admit it, but some of the series have grown on him too, especially RHONJ and RHOBH.  Sometimes he will reach the point where he says he’s had enough for the season (especially with RHONY and back when RHOM was still around), but for the most part, he is an active participant in my habit, and he is definitely an enabler.

Now, to the point, or something like a point.

Usually I watch these shows on a delay, because my bedtime does not permit me to watch them live.  I usually save the episode on my DVR and watch it a few days later, during the window between when my children go to bed and I do, but because it’s summer and things have unfolded a little bit differently than we planned, we’ve been staying up until 10 or 10:30 (GASP!), so I watched the show live last night.  And I am so glad I did.

If you don’t watch RHONY, and think you will, stop reading now, because there are spoilers ahead. If you don’t watch RHONY, and never plan to watch, you might also want to stop reading, because this is not going to interest you.

Luann, or Countess Luann, has never been my favorite person on the show.  It’s not that I don’t like her, obviously I don’t know her, and it’s a TV show, but I mean I don’t get a bad feeling about her or anything like that, I just never really understood her.  That sounds weird.  How can I possibly understand someone I watch on television?  That would be almost as strange as someone reading this blog and saying they really knew me, or saying I’m not their favorite, because they don’t understand me.  It’s weird.  Still, most of the time I think we form attachments to characters on television, reality or not, or writers, because we feel some kind of connection to them.  I never felt a connection to her, because I think something about her just didn’t make sense.  Something about her didn’t seem quite real.

After watching last night, I think she definitely seems more real, and she was very, very funny.  They chose the clip of her saying, “Be cool,” for a reason, but most of the time those teasers end up being a disappointment.  This was not.  It was so funny, because it was so ridiculous, but so real.  Exactly what I love about these shows.  And actually, that’s basically how I feel about most of the people in my life, when they don’t make me furious.

She ends up yelling at one of the other cast members, Heather.  Now, the thing is, the activity Heather was mad about (her friends brought home a strange man and let him sleep in the same house, in fact in a room connected to the one she shared with another friend through a bathroom), would have made me angry too.  It was disrespectful and irresponsible and should not have happened.  It’s just not something you expect your adult girl friends to do, and really, I wouldn’t have expected it from my twenty-something girl friends either.

But the fit that was thrown, the stomping, storming around, yelling, and crying, that followed, was absurd.  It went beyond the usual, “Wow, this is really happening?” to something that felt less authentic.  I’m not sure it would be fair to describe the outrage as manufactured, but I can’t think of a more appropriate term at the moment.

No one is perfect, and we all get tired of dealing with friends or acquaintances or family members who pretend they are.  Just //giphy.com/embed/R16OHuuZtqTKw“>be cool.

There was also a lot of talk about “girl code” in this episode.  I’m not sure exactly what that means, or at least, I’m not sure I know anyone who agrees on what girl code requires, and even if they did, I don’t imagine any of them would follow it.*  I wonder why that is.  And I wonder if it’s a good thing or a bad thing.  I know much has been made of this elsewhere, and the assumption seems to be that the lack of girl code is a problem.  One post actually proposed a new, universal girl code, but I would say that “code” is really a simple request for basic human decency, one that is, to be sure, often ignored.  In fact, I would suggest that nine out of ten of us have violated it within the past five years, and ninety-nine out of one hundred of us have violated it at some point in our twenties.

I know “guy code” is an actual thing, but I’m not sure it’s ever actually made anyone’s life better.  However, it does seem that most guys follow it most of the time, or at least believe they do.  I’m not talking about “Don’t sleep with your friend’s wife,” because, again, I take that as something more basic and universal than “guy code.”  I’m talking more about the set of rules that prevent men from dating a friend’s ex-girlfriend, or a friend’s sister, or a friend’s ex-girlfriend’s sister, or from giving a girl a foot massage.

I’m just not sure these rules actually help anyone.  What if the guy in question is actually in love with his friend’s ex-girlfriend’s sister?  What if she is the love of his life, the kind of love Nicholas Sparks novels are made out of?  So what, is this guy really supposed to walk away because he doesn’t want to violate guy code?  That would be pretty terrible.  And not just for their hypothetical future children.

Maybe instead of thinking that men are somehow superior because they have and usually follow guy code, or trying to create and enforce our own girl code, we could all just try to be nice.  And be cool.  Last time, I promise.  Just be cool.

*I can think of two exceptions that prove that rule.