Thursday, November 3, 2011

SARA

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It feels like something should happen once you step over the safety rail and out onto the edge. It feels like the world should tear itself apart trying to stop you, the very muscles of your body tensing up against your movements, the sky electric with the morose.

Of course, it doesn’t. The world doesn’t match or diminish you. It probably won’t even have the decency to cry. It just... goes on. If you’re an optimist, that ability- that necessity- to always keep going on, even after you and all your petty little problems have fallen, seems amazing. If you’re me, it is merely another sign of your insignificance.

Nothing and everything happens, spinning, keeping calm and carrying on. I hang suspended, dizzy with the enormity and the fearfulness of it all. I want it to go on. I want to stop. Most of all, I want to be the one to make it do these things, to have some sense of control over the chaos. No such chance. I will die as I have lived- in pale imitation.

My mouth sucks in air for a final breath, my heart beat a rich thrum deep in my chest. I close my eyes, letting my weight press me forwards, my toes barely keeping to the edge of the bridge....

...And a sound fills my ears, startling me, brushing me back.

There, lingering in the air in front of me, is a blue box, tilting in some invisible breeze, accompanied by a ridiculous whirring sound.

One of the doors of the phone box – no, ‘police public call box,’ I see the lettering reads- opens, and a man steps out, nearly breaking his own neck as he stumbles about wildly, only now realizing his mistake in picking this particular piece of air to land on. He sees me there, just fingertips and knees and toes against the cold metal, and I know he thinks he understands, thinks he is now totally aware of who and what I am. This man is completely impossible.

He waves at me. I slink a little further from the already distant water, lifting myself to sit upon the thick steel bar that separates the happy from the lost. My hand raises of its own accord. What it gives him is more of a twitch than a friendly gesture, but he grins anyways, all laugh lines and ruffled hair.

“Hello!” He calls out jovially. “I’m the Doctor. I just fancied going out to the Golden Gate, and I seem to have misjudged the landing by a few feet. The TARDIS is a smart one, though, she never lets me fall.” At this point he took a deep breath, steadying himself in the doorway of the booth, which was glowing from inside with a mysterious golden sheen.

“Who exactly are you, though?” I ask. I feel as if I’m hardly in a position where the rudeness of direct questions should matter. This freeness has been liberating in the past few months, as I have slowly grown less scared of losing and dying. I no longer take the precautions most people center their lives around, providing for increased physical and social protection. Even as I feel trapped inside myself, unable to bare my feelings or bear my reality, I have defended myself with an aura of coolness, of physical and unironic fearlessness. Why should I fear death when life no longer has a use for me?

His answer is nowhere near as direct, which annoys me faintly. As I so recently asked, who is he to interrupt the melancholy of the night?

“Who am I?” His eyes open wide in a play of innocence. “I’m nobody! Who are you? Are you nobody, too?”

“I hardly know sir, just at present,” I reply in turn. What a pair, Emily Dickinson and Alice.

“I see! As the Caterpillar did not, of course. Well, I was here to see the sunset. Do you fancy watching it with me? I’ve always said that things are better with a companion, a friend... without someone there, someone who hasn’t seen the sunset in the way that you have, you start to lose sight of why you really watch it after all. All the miracles of the universe, big and small, seems so much less miraculous. No, yes, it’s important to have someone to share the world with, the wonder.”

I’m quite tempted to tell the man that I’d rather he just be gone, but his company feels so different from all the relationships I’ve had with people lately, the conversations with white-coated psychiatrists and with coffee shop baristas and drop-outs. Perhaps it’s the Dickinson, or his falling from the sky like an angel in a pinstriped suit. Whatever it is about him, I decide that I shall give him the moment. This whimsy, another uncontrollable thing, will just have to be. In any case, it’s not as if he can hurt me; as if anything he is capable of doing or saying to me can ruin me any more.

“Alright,” I tell him, my voice cracking the word into two shattered pieces. “I’ll sit with you.”

“Brilliant!” With that, he turns, jamming the door of the box shut with a long finger and spinning out of view. The same respiratory hum fills the air, and the light on the sloped roof of the thing lights and flickers dimly, flashing in and out in time with the noise. Slowly, it disappears before my eyes, gradually dissolving into the air before me, before suddenly melting back into the world a few yards away, safely inside the guard rail and next to one of the towers.

“Well?” He calls as he twirls out from the mysterious depths of the box. “What do you think?”

“It’s...” The words catch in my throat, and I know that I have absolutely no words to describe that event. No words for anything else, either, really. That’s what scares me most of all- how empty the world feels to me know, how bare, how cold. I have no descriptions for things that once I found happy. I feel abstractly like Frodo Baggins. The taste of strawberries seems alien to me, and all is dusty and dark. Perhaps this doctor is right when he says that a companion helps you to see the world anew. But perhaps he isn’t aware of just how hard it is to find someone who really wants to look around and view things from beyond his or her own perspective.

“Mhm,” he breathes. “You haven’t told me your name yet, you know.”

“Nor have you,” I remind him.

He grins again, Cheshire Cat-like, too wide for his handsome face. “I’ve told you- I’m nobody.”

“And I’m nobody, too.”

“So there’s a pair of us! How dreary to be somebody.”

“I’m Clarisse.”

“And I’m the Doctor. I’ve said that already, haven’t I?”

“I suppose you have, but it means just as little as it did the first time. What sort of doctor?”

“How public, like a frog-“ His voice is still bright, lilting up at the end to express joking refusal to answer.

“But-“ I protest.

“-To tell your name the livelong day-“

I sigh, and the faintest hint of a smile pushes itself up onto my chapped and torn lips.

“To an admiring bog!” He concludes, raising his arms in the arm dramatically.

We are seated on the ground, our backs up against the damp coolness of the tower. For a few minutes we look up and around, silent apart from the scuff of my boots against each other as I fidget.

“Why?” His voice is soft, almost a whisper, as he asks the inevitable question. There is loss and sadness in his voice, but I sense no judgment there.

“Because... because...” I try to find a way to phrase this, at least, in a way that can be intelligible. “Because I’m never going to be anything. I cannot change the world. I cannot make things better. There’s nothing at all I can do to prevent the random, or even the planned. I am good for absolutely nothing. And I’m afraid. I am cowardly and I am afraid that if I stay on this world, I will be not only failing to cause good, but causing unceasing harm. My actions have already caused enough scars, both for myself and others, and I don’t want to cut anyone any deeper.”

The Doctor closes his eyes for a second, as though his mind is far away. When he opens them, the grief is even more evident in his face. While so recently I saw him as bright and optimistic, I now see that beneath his mask of happiness he bears a guilt and a pain that is so strong I can’t believe I didn’t see it before.

He turns towards me, his hands outstretched, as if to tuck my hair back behind my ear.

I twitch back out of habit and a persistent fear.

Undaunted, the Doctor places one gentle hand on either side of my face, his fingers on my temples, I stare at him, frozen in place, mentally planning how best to escape this man, how to throw him away from me. Suddenly, something happens inside my head. A presence unknown to me enters my mind, blue and silver and swirling red in my own deep purple. The Doctor speaks, and his words echo inside me as I open my eyes to see that his mouth isn’t moving at all.

“In 900 years of time and space,” he whispers, his voice amplified by our connection, our linked minds, “I’ve never met anyone who wasn’t important before.”

My eyes are closed again and images glitter before my eyelids- a woman dressed all in white writing alone in a New England bedroom, a ginger-haired man with a bandaged ear, paint brush in hand and tears streaming from his face, and there, standing next to the Doctor, a plain, normal looking girl with metal-encased monsters exploding behind her.

“Emily Dickinson,” I choke out. “Vincent Van Gogh...?”

“And Donna Noble,” he finishes for me. “A temp from Leadworth. A perfectly ordinary woman who saved the universe.”

“So because she did, because Emily Dickinson did, you think I can.” While I’m still in shock at how this man could possibly have shown me these things, I am also annoyed at the nerve of him. Just like all the others, he is certain he knows how to ‘cheer me up,’ how to ‘make me better.’ I yank myself away from his gentle grip and stand.

The water crashes against the shore to my left, too far below to be heard.

I hear him stand behind me, too, and my muscles tense.

“I know it’s hard,” he starts off slowly and carefully, as though fearful I’ll jump any second. “I know that sometimes it seems like there’s nothing you can do. I’ve felt that more than I can ever say. I understand how painful it can be to let someone go, and how much guilt that can bring. Sadness and darkness are very real things, and there are monsters hiding in the shadows, but even they shall pass. The world is also full of bright and beautiful things, and the beauty is worth fighting for. It’s worth standing up, even if you think that by standing you’re making things worse.”

I open my mouth to reply, but he cuts me off.

“It is impossible to live without failing at something, unless you live so cautiously that you might as well not have lived at all.”

“’...In which case you fail by default.’ Yes, I know my J.K. Rowling just as well as I know Emily Dickinson, but that doesn’t help me at all. I have already failed by default, and will continue to do so. What exactly is the point if I might as well not have lived at all?”

“There is still time,” he says annoyingly. “You can still make the difference you want to. Clarisse, you’re going to be amazing. You’re going to be more than amazing, you’re going to be brilliant... and nothing can stop you from that. Nothing can stop you but yourself.”

“And this crippling depression I carry around with me,” I retort. “I can hope that I’m going to be special and try to be great and that’s all lovely. But it just isn’t going to be, and it hurts too much to keep trying. Once you stop trying, it doesn’t hurt anymore. And that sounds pretty nice to me right now.”

“But it’s worth the pain!” The Doctor shouts, now, all fear forgotten in his defense of himself and me. “You can’t stop hoping. Don’t stop hoping that you can make a difference, that you are making a difference. You have to believe in hope and in the infinity of it and the power that it holds. Yes, hoping hurts. Hoping lets you down and drives you crazy and renders you useless. But that hope is better than anything in the world because it is what makes people do things, makes them matter. Hope is what inspires people, what made the Allies win the war and the Renaissance begin. I believe in you. I believe that you can change the world, that you just haven’t taken the chance yet.”

“It gets better,” I intone sarcastically, parroting the phrase thrown at so many LGBTQA teens these days.

“It does get better,” he replies immediately. “It gets so much better, once you’ve found the right people and place and being. And you can be the right people and place and being to make it better for other people. Life can take dramatic turns for the better- but it won’t do that on its own. Life will get better when you help it to do so. Make your life exactly what you want it to be by being who you are.”

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot,” I quote in a childlike, high-pitched voice dripping with bitterness. “Nothing is going to get better. It’s not.”

“Ah, Dr. Seuss!” The Doctor is back to cheerful again, quickly covering his momentary lapse into seriousness, as though hoping to deny to himself that his heart is broken. “There’s another one I’d love to meet! Emily Dickinson, Dr. Seuss... What do you think? Should we visit Emily or Theodore?”

“I’m actually a bit busy this week. Lots to do, you know. Not much time for visiting dead authors.”

“Ah.” His smile droops. “So you won’t come with me?”

“Let’s see here. Man appears out of thin air in a big blue box. Man quotes Emily Dickinson. Man watches sunset. Man tries to convince girl not to kill herself. Oh, and right, he goes all Vulcan and reads her mind. Then he tells her about how guilty he fees and invites her to visit two of her childhood inspirations... who are dead. Pretty sure the first type of person they tell you to avoid when you’re in safety classes at school is magic, poetry-reading space sluts who are probably imaginary.”

“I... I’m not a slut!” The Doctor says, surprised and offended. “And I’m certainly not imaginary!”

“Alright, whatever.” I’ve lost patience for this man, and I’ve lost patience with myself even more. What am I waiting for? Why have I let him delay me, give me even more suffering? “I’ll just... go now, shall I?”

“I wish you’d stay,” and his tone is sweet again. “Really. Give me a chance. Let me show you the world.”

“Shining, shimmering, splendid?” I ask.

“Tell me... now when did you last let your heart decide?”

I hesitate. Once again, I ask myself, what could he possibly do to hurt me any more than I have already hurt myself? The only thing I fear is that he could convince me to change my mind. How cowardly is that, to be so terrified of another’s opinion that I won’t risk hearing it? If he can prove to me that there’s more to live for, if has actions can indeed speak louder than his ridiculous words, maybe it’d be alright to have my mind changed. Maybe I can bear the monsters with someone like him by my side, entirely mad and totally inspiring.

“...Where exactly are we going?” I am suspicious, but without fear. After all, I don’t have any particular connections to this place, any more than I am tied to my own life.

“Anywhere. Everywhere. All of space and time.” To me, this sounds vaguely prepared, as though he’s used this line on potential ‘companions’ before. The Doctor leaps towards his box (time machine? Ridiculous. Although I did see it melt into the air and reappear...) and opens the door, the back of his head hiding the absurd smile I’m sure is gracing his face.

“Come on in!” He shouts. “Make yourself at home!”

As the door opens wider, the entire section of bridge walkway we’re standing on is bathed in a sudden glow. I reach into my pocket and pull out a well-worn piece of sea glass and rub it between my fingers as I have done so many times before in times of franticness or confusion. This small familiarity is welcome as I step into a new Perhaps- a thoroughly different one from what I sought mere minutes ago in the emptiness of my fall.

“Still, I go to seek a great Perhaps,” I whisper under my breath, as I step through the doorway and into another world, one guarded by a man who walks through time.

The inside of the Police Box is entirely different from the quiet, muggy San Francisco evening outside. Everything glows with a faint green and gold light, as though I’ve landed in a glass case under the ocean. Long pieces of bleached coral reaffirm this, reaching up to the high domed ceiling. The light radiates from a globe at the room’s center, low to the ground but stretched up like a belled The rounded base of the center pillar- no, it’s a console of some type, but a glorious one- is decked out with wires and levers and handles, like a child’s playful re-creation of an airplane pilot mechanism. I notice a hammer on a piece of string, and a computer screen. The modge-podge of dials and buttons is incomprehensible to me but seems to make perfect sense to the Doctor, who bounds up to it, throwing his long tan coat over the crook of a pillar as he goes, showing total disregard for a hat stand just inside the entrance.

The whole scene is a mix of alien bizarreness and steampunk normality, with duck tape holding pieces of an inside railing together and the floor beneath the console just metal grating. Despite these aspects of simplicity, the whole thing holds an air of strangeness, consistently poised on the edge of something new and dangerous and exciting. I stand dumbfounded in the doorway before hesitantly stepping around, drawn inextricably to the console in the center.

“How?” I ask, my question a mirror of his earlier ‘why?’

“It’s dimensionally transcendental,” the Doctor states proudly, like a child showing off a new invention. “That means it’s... bigger on the inside!”

“Well yes, that much is obvious,” I say, still perplexed. “I meant... how is it so... alive?” The whole ship or box or machine or whatever it is has a certain feeling to it, a consciousness.

“You can feel it? That’s brilliant!” The Doctor practically jumped on top of me in his excitement. “It seems alive because it is, of course. This is a Type 40 TARDIS, which stands for Time And Relative Dimension In Space. It’s a sentient ship built by a race known as the Time Lords.” This all comes out as a great rush, as though he’s desperate to communicate how awe inspiring this (and he) should be.

I do my best to catch up.

“The... Time Lords? A different species, you mean? A species that considers themselves the rulers of time itself? I don’t much like the sound of that, no matter how technologically able they are.”

He seems a bit downtrodden at this. “You know, I’m a Time Lord. We’re not too bad.”

“You’re... an alien. From a different planet.” Admittedly, after all the other strange things I’ve experienced in the last few hours, having this absolutely insane man be another species is practically believable.

“Yup!”

“So... you control time?”

“I don’t control it exactly. I more... have the ability to utilize it in a way other races don’t. And I have certain responsibilities when it comes to maintaining history.” He sounds wary, as though worried he might give too much away or say the wrong thing.

“Responsibilities? Like what? History can’t maintain itself?”

“Well, species beside the Time Lords have developed ways to travel through time. Sometimes they abuse that power and try to mess with established events for their own benefit.”

“But when you do it, it’s ‘maintaining history,’ eh? I see.”

“It’s not quite like that!” He’s on the defensive again, and I can see he’s protecting himself from more than just me, like he secretly agrees. “The Time Lords invented temporal travel, and I always make sure to never interfere with what must be. I just help things along, rid worlds of Racnoss and daleks and any other monster of the week!”

“Alright, fair enough. But what about the other Time Lords? Do they have the same morals and integrity that you, sir, are so plentiful in?”

“There aren’t any others.” His eyes are piercing, and it’s almost as though he’s inside my mind again as he looks me straight on. “They all died. I let them die, I had to. But I don’t let it stop me, not ever. Because it’s important that I keep fighting, for them. That what my people suffered did not happen in vain. I might not be able to wipe out all the evils in creation, but I can try. And while I wish it had never happened, wish every day that I had never been pushed to do what I did, I can’t change it. I can only live, now, as I should have done before.”

“I wish it need not have happened in my time,” My voice lacks his passion and his defiance, but there is a similar grief in it.

“So do all who live to see such times,” he quotes in turn. “But that is not up to us to decide. All we can decide is what to do with the times that are given to us.”

He opens his arms as though to give me a hug, then thinks better of it and turns wide towards the console. He pulls a lever and bangs a button with the flat of his palm and grabs hold of a handle as the TARDIS punches into action. I put my arms around a coral column and clasp my hands together, my toes barely supporting my weight against the rapidly shifting floor.

“Have you decided yet? Where are we off to?” His grin is back in place.

“Uhm....”

He begins to whistle the theme from Jeopardy, laughing at my hesitation. Give a literature geek the Universe, and apparently she’ll sit thinking forever. That always was my problem, people would tell me. I think too much. I think myself unhappy. And here I am off, again, caught in my head.

“Uhm....” I mutter again, still trying to think of where I want to go, what I want to see and feel and touch firsthand.

“Do you want to go meet Emily Dickinson?” The Doctor asked. “I bet she’s brilliant! Of course, bit eccentric, bit quiet, bit anti-social, but brilliant!”

“I’d love to meet her, of course, but don’t they say you shouldn’t meet your heroes? And wouldn’t we scare her? I’ve read a bit about her life and everything I’ve read says that she mainly communicated by letters, and only very rarely left her house, or even her bedroom. I feel like falling out of the sky in her dining room might prove a bit much for her!”

The Doctor visibly wilts. “I suppose you’re right, of course. At least about the scaring her bit. I, however, think you should always meet your heroes! That’s the best part about it, getting to know them, seeing how they really are! Either their actions impress you even more, and you realize just how perfect they are, or you have the opportunity to learn that even people who have done and said beautiful things may not be so fantastic all the time.”

“I don’t know about that. What if, in meeting them, they really just reaffirm your former convictions about the world? If Vincent Van Gogh could create such beautiful art and express himself so well, and still feel enough pain to kill himself, what chance do I have?”

He just stares at me, and I wonder if he’s regretting bringing me aboard.

“Not Emily Dickinson then,” is all he says, and then, “what do you think about going to the future, instead of to the past? Maybe we can drop by my good friend Will Shakespeare later, but for now...”

“Oh,” I gasp. “I hadn’t really thought about it. Where in the future? It’s definitely not a subject I can pretend to know a lot about.”

“How about... New Earth?” He sounds bittersweet, as though the place reminds him of something- or someone- he has loved and lost.

“Is that a nice place?” The question sounds childlike, even to my ears, and he smiles.

“Gorgeous,” he replies. “There are two moons in the sky, and the ground smells like apple-grass. It’s one of my favorite planets to visit. The city of New New York- well, actually New New New New New New New New New New New New New New New York- is so wonderfully built. Skyscrapers and a lovely hospital and-“

“Alright, alright!” I laugh. “Don’t spoil it all for me before we get there!”

“Brilliant! Allons-y!” And the TARDIS jolts and crashes around a bit more.

As he tries to steady the ship, frowning at a screen mounted to the console, I take a minute to watch him. The man- Time Lord- is tall and thin and more than a bit attractive. His eyes are the best part of him, deep and bright and expressive, and his hair, which stands up all over the place. As he raises an eyebrow at the console, he puts a hand through it, a nervous habit I’m sure he’ll repeat. And how could I possibly neglect to mention his accent? It’s gorgeously British, posh and faintly superior. It’s the sort of accent that most American girls go crazy for.

His light-brown overcoat twirls behind him as he spins around the controls like a girl’s dress at a fancy ball, and I giggle faintly as I notice his shoes for the first time- I’m in a spaceship with an alien in red Converse tennis shoes.

It’s his quirkiness that interests me, though, far more than the way he looks and dresses. I have always been drawn to less-noticed details in people, like the way the walk, the colloquialisms they choose to use, how they keep their fingernails. Incidentally, his fingernails are neat and clean. I look down at my own jagged and scabbed nail beds and vow to keep them out of sight.

When I look up again, the Doctor’s pulled a pair of dark, rectangular tortoise shell glasses from a pocket and is glancing at the screen again from behind them, his eyebrow still up and his hair even more ruffled.

“Is something wrong?” I ask hesitantly, hoping not to disrupt him in any important mental calculations.

“No! Well... yes, but... not wrong exactly, but... the TARDIS doesn’t seem to be heading towards New Earth... she does that quite a bit actually.”

“You mean... your sentient spaceship doesn’t take you to where you ask it to?”

“Well, yes. It always takes me to where I need to be, though, that’s for sure. Like tonight!”

“You said you wanted to watch the sunset at Golden Gate!”

“I did, who doesn’t? I just hadn’t exactly been planning on it on that particular day, or at all, really, I just sort of showed up there, and-“

“She sent you to me.” My voice betrays no emotion but my mind is whirring with the impossibility of this on top of everything else.

“Your life is important, and she felt that. She felt you, calling out to her and to me, all the way across the universe. And she came to your aid. She took me where I was needed.”

“I’ve had quite enough of being someone’s charity case.” My voice is quiet but I can hear the anger and the rage inside it. “Just leave me somewhere, please. I don’t have a home to go back to but I don’t want to be a burden on you or your magical time machine. Let me be. I’m not worth wasting your time with. Please, just go save a planet. Find someone who deserves your help.”

I unhook my arms from the pillar I’ve been holding tight to for support, mentally and physically, and reach into my pocket to feel the comforting weight of the stone inside it.

Without looking at the Doctor, who is silently watching my progress, I hastily stride across the area surrounding the console and down the little ramp to the doorway. I yank on one of the police box doors, so out of place in the steampunk, futuristic interior. It doesn’t open. I push on it. It remains closed. Turning to face the Doctor, again, my voice keeps its coolness as I demand that he let me out.

“No.” His answer comes heavy with pity, and I hate it. I hate it and him and how I’ve let myself be dragged into this.

I sit heavily against the inside of the doorway.

“I won’t beg or plead. I’m not going to scream or scratch or fight. I just want you to let me go.”

“I can’t.” He’s locked inside his own head, too, and I can see him running off without his emotions. The Doctor’s face is blank and his tone the same, as though he simply can’t bear to show how he feels. As though he might break with the pain of it.

“Why not?” I don’t care, I don’t want to hear it, I know what he’s going to say and it’s absolutely none of his business.

“Because it’ll be my fault. I can’t bear to have another life on my hands. I can’t stand knowing that I could have helped, but didn’t. I’ve seen so many people fall, and there’s nothing I could have done for them, but you... I can help you. There is, you know, surprisingly, always hope. And I still have hope that I can show you that.”

“What happens to me isn’t your fault. It isn’t anyone’s fault but my own. The fault, dear Doctor, is not in my world, but in myself, that I am an underling. Find someone to travel with who can see the world as you do, who wants to love and live and believes in radical hope, who believes that even inside the suffering she and the world around her can grow and become more beautiful. Leave me to sleep.”

“To sleep, perhaps to dream?” It strikes me how much like Hamlet this lonely traveler is, how mad, how tethered to the dead. He must be revengeful, must drop that melancholy and that cheerful mask at times to show a powerful anger.

“My dreams are nightmares.”

He is silent for a moment, and I wait to see his reaction. Part of me, a part I despise even more than I despise the rest, wants him to force me to stay, wants to travel with him and make this lonely man less lonely with my presence, with my smile and my words. I want to comfort him.

The rest of me feels how foolish this is, how utterly ridiculous it is to put so much trust into a man I don’t know at all and whose background is totally unclear. How can I be sure that he will stay with me, how can I be sure that he will love and support me for any longer than anyone else did? They find out you’re in pain, and they hug you, help you for a while, but they grow weary of it. It happens. I don’t blame them for being tired of me or for hating me. How can I when I feels so much of the same myself?

He runs his hand through his hair again and I can see the conclusion forming on his face.

“Please,” he begs, one last time.

“I’m sorry,” and I genuinely am. I don’t want to hurt this eccentric but intriguing man, but I know that this is for the better. He may think he wants me, but I know myself so much better than he ever can, and I know just how wrong he is.

“How about I drop you off in Cardiff, then? I have to refuel my ship, anyways.” His eyes remain still and deep, and I wonder where their sparkle has gone.

“You have to refuel... in Cardiff? That’s in Wales, right? How does a time machine refuel... in Wales?”

“There’s a rift in time and space in Cardiff, you see. It doesn’t take very long to get all the energy I need- just about twenty or thirty seconds, if it’s been active. The TARDIS travels in the time vortex, you see. It’s all a bit confusing.” He seems reluctant to explain, despite me having pegged him as a nerd earlier, the sort of person- alien- who would ramble on for hours about their particular areas of expertise.

All the while we’ve been having this conversation, the Doctor’s just been standing there, watching me where I sit, leaning up against the doors that refuse to open against my weight. Now he turns, slumping against the console. His dance around it is far less animated now, as though the very life has been sucked from his body.

With a similarly muted shuffle, the TARDIS sinks to the ground, landing with a dull thump.

I lower my knees from my chest and lift myself on my elbows before standing fully. I turn to face the wooden doors I was until so recently leaning up against and wait. The Doctor softly steps up behind me and places his hand on my shoulder. I tense, and look over it at him.

He takes his hand from my shoulder and lifts my chin instead so my face is turned towards him, uplifted like a child seeking praise.

He carefully leans towards me ever so slowly, as though approaching some sensitive and skittish wild thing, and kisses me gently, his thin lips brushing mine like flower petals. My eyelids flutter and I unconsciously part my lips in an unsaid “oh,” and he responds in turn, his face matching mine, his eyes half closed but watching me the whole time. It is a comforting kiss as opposed to a passionate one, a tender, fragile thing of porcelain and shattered dreams and broken wings cocooned in this place of impossibility, Time Lord and human spinning in a dichotomy of melancholy chaos.

He draws back from me and pushes the door open with a trembling hand, letting the cold evening air of Wales tear the moment to shreds; nothing more than a tattered banner twisting in the polluted breeze wafting from the sea.

“Clarisse...” My name, sharp and pointed on so many other tongues, is a sugar cube dissolving on his tongue. “You’ve read Fahrenheit 451, yes? [...]

I’m totally speechless, divided between slapping him for touching me without permission and reaching up to do it all again, but instead I find my feet stepping out from the blue doorframe of their own accord, turning me around only after I’m a few feet away from it. As I stare, dumfounded and numb with overwhelming feeling, the mournful cry I heard earlier on the bridge starts out, ending with a whale-song like pitch as the blue dissolves into the grey of the night.

I am alone in a city that until this evening I was uncertain was really in Wales. I know nothing about the place and know nobody here. It’s getting dark, and the wind is coming in off of the water, and suddenly my witty t-shirt and jeans leave me feeling overwhelmingly cold.

It’s funny how just a few hours ago I didn’t notice the weather or the temperature at all, didn’t really notice the world around me at all. I complained, then, about how self-centered the happy seem to me, how overwhelmed in their own petty problems they are, and in the amazingness of their lives. Now I see truly that those who suffer are also bound in self.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Social Studies Paper: Taxes

Franklin Delano Roosevelt once said that “taxes... are the dues that we pay for the privileges of membership in an organized society.” While no one really wants to pay taxes or give up their hard earned money, taxes are a necessary part of a well-run system of government and a requirement if the citizens of this country expect to continue to rely on public services like roads, schools, and libraries. Without tax money keeping these systems running, they will crumble, leaving us a degenerate shadow of our former grandeur.

This having been said, there is still a real issue as to how to most fairly tax the citizens of a country. Many people don’t have enough money to be able to afford to pay the significant amount of taxation that is required to retain their belongings as well as keep their house, feed their families, and pay for all other daily expenses one encounters in everyday life. Income tax is based off of the amount of money earned by an individual, and is used in most countries around the world. Many people criticize it for supposedly punishing people or working, discouraging savings and investments, and limiting economic growth and helpful competition in business. To help avoid the overtaxation of individuals who cannot afford such, progressive taxation applies increasing tax rates as earnings increase. For example, the first $100,000 may be taxed at 5%, and the next at 10%. A flat tax does nothing to prevent this, with all earnings taxed at the same rate. I believe a progressive form of income tax should be applied, although it should not be the only form of taxation utilized. A sales tax should also continue to be instigated, although not (or very minimally) on food products and other necessary living supplies. Taxes on alcohol, cigarettes, and the like should be more heavily taxed so as to minimize the overuse of these products if possible. Capital gains tax should be grouped with income tax, as it is, although its lower rate as compared to ordinary income is, in my opinion, not really necessary. It is intended to encourage capital investments and as compensation for the effects of inflation, but I don’t see this as enough incentive for lowering the rate. Thusly, a combination of the above forms of taxation should continue to be in use in America.

According to the United States Office of Management and Budget, 19.27% of the US Budget is devoted to National Defense, while only 2.77% goes to Education and Job Training. In fact, 7.22% is devoted to “Other National Defense,” which is just described as that, no more thoroughly. Only .55% goes to Water And Land Management, but without that proper maintaining of our natural resources, this country will quickly be overrun with overwhelming pollution and many of our nation’s most highly valued landmarks will suffer and be quickly destroyed. There is no easy response to how tax money should best be spent, for there are an endless amount of areas that need more government assistance, but I truly believe that more time, effort, and money should be devoted to both education and the preservation of natural resources. Preparing for the future and remembering the past and the world around us are equally important. Both yield benefits for the country, as well- increased productivity in the work force through education and less pollution and misuse of resources at the other.

Most people are loathe to give up their money to a government that they may not trust to do the right thing with it, but these people are also reliant on government highways, transit, food assistance, and unemployment. While taxes may seem bad, they are actually an important part of maintaining a functioning society.

Rory/Plaid fic; Doctor Who.

“Rory! Hurry up, the Doctor says we’re going to Hogwarts today! God, you take longer to dress than I do… and you don’t look half as good,” Amy shouts as she pulls on a loose red jumper, her voice slightly muffled but still clearly her usual self-satisfied tone. Rory would bet his soon-to-be-doctorate that she’d paired that last statement with a smirk, although he couldn’t see her face under that cascade of fiery hair.
“I’m coming, I’m coming,” he calls back in good natured annoyance as Amy moves towards the door with a knowing glance back at her husband. “I don’t know why you take so long to get ready every day. It’s hardly as though you change your wardrobe much… Plaid this, plaid that, plaid, plaid everyday it’s plai-“
“Hey, I like the plaid!”
“Just like you liked the ponytail?” She jabs.
“Oi, you can’t blame Current Me for the hairstyle choices of Dream Future Me.”
“Oh, watch me.” She winks, and turns from him with a little flick of the hips. He watches her hungrily, then turns back to his current task as she exists the room- color choices.
Lying there on the bed was any man’s dream- six freshly-laundered, warm, cozy shirts, in a pattern that almost made him- oh, yes, there it was.
He picked up one at random and buried his nose in it. That smell- ooh, it smelled like home, and like hearing Amy accept his proposal, and like spearmint toothpaste. It was long evenings spent curled up next to a fire with a book and his glasses, feeling intelligent and powerful and the most important man in the world. It smelled like-
“Rory, are you licking that shirt?”
He jumped back in astonishment at the familiar voice.
“I mean, back when I was a young lad I had a bit of a thing for a pair of lacy panty-hose, and many have speculated that I’ve done unspeakable things to a stalk of celery, but really, really, a plaid shirt?”
“Doctor! What have I told you about using your vortex manipulator to show up in Amy and my room like that? Did last week teach you nothing?”
“Oh, well, it did teach me some things, things this regeneration hasn’t… well, I’ve been busy with saving the world and… and I thought maybe I’d get some tips but I didn’t expect to see first hand… I though, wedding night, you’d probably be looking at photographs and…oh… alright, carry on, carry on.”
He spun on the spot and vanished again, but Rory was still on edge. What if Amy came back? She’d told him before they got married that he’d have to drop what she called his “Plaid Habit,” but hadn’t she just left him be with the delightful pieces of clothing just now? Well, however bipolar Ms. Rory Williams was, it simply wasn’t safe.
He’d just have to wait, that was all. That was the nicest thing about fabric- it was simply never impatient.
”Soon, my love” he whispered into the fuzzy carress of the shirt, and ran from the room to see what the Doctor had in store next.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

American Heritage

The area of North America confident enough in its own power to simply call itself “America,” the country that borders the United States of Mexico but is supremely certain that if it goes by “the United States,” no one will be confused. Home of the free, the proud, the brave- the country that fended off communism and sped along a new era of technological advancements, but also suffers from such wide spread obesity that it’s unlikely to speed along on a treadmill. American history, just like the history of any other major country of any relative age, is full of both beautiful and admirable achievements, and less shiny ones. To focus on just America’s successes when describing our heritage is dangerous to the extreme, and could lead to a repetition of history in relation to the more unflattering pieces of the USA’s past. American heritage is far more than just apple pie, fireworks, and documents in lovely penmanship. If one merely remembers historical events in a pleasing, becoming light, then a huge part of the meaning of heritage will be lost- the necessity of preserving the ideals and lessons we’ve learned from the past for the benefit of those who follow after us.

Our nation has had a profound history of maintaining our national treasures, and one of the most obvious signs of that history is the Nation Park System. The founders of the Park System started a legacy that reminded Americans that preserving the nation’s valuable environmental areas was indeed a national issue, and not one simply reliant on the usefulness of the area in question. There are national parks around the country, but none of them are maintained for the income that they bring in or the resources they might provide. Are we really of the narcissistic belief that it is within our right to destroy these long protected landmarks due to a lack of well-managed funds, or a belief that there is more money to be made somewhere else? “Past these towering monuments, past these mounded billows of ornate sandstone, past these oak-set glens, past these fern-decked alcoves, past these mural curves, we glide hour after hour, stopping now and then, as our attention is attracted by some new wonder-“ This is how John Wesley Powell describes his first journey through the Grand Canyon. Should it be within our power to deny generations to come the ability to experience this? Will our consciences allow us to prevent our children from discovering anew the Grand Canyon and Yellowstone, without fear of inhaling toxic gases or destroying an ecosystem with a touch?

America has a history of beauty, of the overcoming of more powerful oppressors and a constant struggle for the rights of all- but it also has a more hidden history of destruction and its own long reign as a persecutor of a variety of minorities and people, including Native Americans and the Irish. The USA can use its influence and power to protect, safe, and improve for the future, or it can raize another culture as it destroyed the people who inhabited this country pre-colonization, and support mass lynchings of anyone different. Some fear that America may be failing in its reign as a world superpower, but my real fear is that we’ll continue to decline morally in such a way as to not deserve the title at all.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

The Effects of Nerdfighters on its Teenage Members Today: Editing help is welcome, thank you.

The Effect of Nerdfighters on its Teenager Members Today

When most people consider the internet as an entity, they think of anonymous posters driving pre-teens and teenagers to suicide through cyberbullying, inappropriate videos made by drunk college students, and an online world where children spend hours glued to the screen, slowly losing their intelligence as they try to get past just one more level. Realistically, the internet is full of value, information, and charitable people, if one only knows where to look. Through one such web community, Nerdfighters, teenagers can learn about people outside of their social bubble and interact with students who share their interests but may live far away, and it also allows them to express themselves creatively and make a difference in the world, despite the lack of monetary capabilities and ability to travel most teenagers have. The community created by Hank and John Green, known as Nerdfighters, has positively impacted teenagers’ knowledge of the wider world, history, science, education, and charity, as well as their ability to accept diversity and their interest in the well-being of their peers around the world.

“What is a nerd, and where did the word come from?” many people may be wondering. There has been much debate over the word, and whether or not it is a negative thing to call someone, for a long time. The word is generally recognized as having come from Dr. Seuss’ If I Ran the Zoo, in which the narrator, Gerald McGrew, states that he would collect “a Nerkle, a Nerd, and a Seersucker too” for his zoo. Phillip K. Dick claimed to have coined the similar “nurd.” A 1951 Newsweek article reported on the word’s popularity in Detroit, while at the same time, a Rensslaer PTI used the word “knurd,” or “drunk” backwards, to describe someone who preferred to stay in and study, as opposed to a partier. In the 1960’s, the term began to spread throughout the United States of America and Scotland as a popular synonym for “square” or “drip.” Only now did it begin to take on its current association with bookishness and social ineptitude.

Today, “nerd” is a term often used in a derogatory way to describe someone who prefers to passionately pursue intellectual activities or other slightly obscure interests than engage in more popular or social activities. Those deemed to be nerds by their classmates are often excluded from physical activities by their peers and are considered loners. They often tend to associate with other like-minded, similarly alienated individuals- hence the typicality of such groups as Nerdfighters forming. John Green, co-founder of Nerdfighters has noted the following about nerds, and how people view nerds. Nerds like us are allowed to be unironically enthusiastic. Nerds are allowed to love stuff, like jump-up-and-down-in-the-chair-can’t-control-yourself- love it.... when people call people nerds, mostly what they’re saying is, ‘you like stuff.’ Which is just not a good insult at all. Like, ‘you are too enthusiastic about the miracle of human consciousness. (Nerd- Brotherhood 2.0)

In addition to those definitions, there are a variety of stereotypes that surround nerds, as well as some more realistic common characteristics. For example, most people assume that all nerds are either very thin or extremely obese, and are intelligent, but socially and physically awkward. In movies, nerds are generally portrayed as white or Asian males with glasses, braces, acne, pocket protectors, and pants worn above the regular levels. Nerds are assumed to be good with computers and technology and enjoy comic books. It is true that for the most part, nerds focus on things considered either overly mature or too young for them- nerds will tend to have a passion for math, science, technology, classic literature, and other intellectual pursuits, or trading cards, comics, RPGs, Legos, fantasy, and science fiction. These passions lead to another common stereotype- that all nerds suffer from OCD, and have an extreme devotion to the rules and the “nerdy” things that they love.

As the computer industry has risen in recent years, “nerdy,” technologically savvy people have gained large fortunes and prestige, making the connotation about nerds less about awkwardness, and more about intelligence. People have begun to realize that some nerdiness is a good thing, as intelligent, respectful, and interesting people tend to earn more money. Katie Hafner was quoted by the New York Times as having said the following in August of 1993:
My idea is to present an image to children that it is good to be intellectual, and not to care about peer pressures to be anti-intellectual. I want every child to turn into a nerd- where that means someone who prefers studying and learning to competing for social dominance, which can unfortunately cause the downward spiral into social rejection. (qtd. Nerd- Brotherhood 2.0)

Another popular quote about nerd pride is well-known and commonly attributed to Bill Gates, but was actually originally said by Charles J. Sykes- “Be nice to nerds. Chances are you’ll end up working for one.”
As the public started viewing nerds in a better light, movies, television shows, and the media also started to encourage nerdiness- some examples are the Revenge of the Nerds in 1984, FC Nerds, and the episode “Nerdator” of Freakazoid. In the episode, this memorable quote was said for the first time:

...What they lack in physical strength, they make up in brain power. Who writes all the best selling books? Nerds. Who directs the top grossing Hollywood movies? Nerds... And who are the people who run for the high office of Presidency? No one but nerds.” (qtd. Nerd- Brotherhood 2.0)

Today, many people choose to celebrate their nerdiness in various ways. In Spain, May 25 is Nerd Pride Day, and there is an entire genre of Nerdcore hip-hop (starring artists like MC Plus +, MC Hawking, and MC Frontalot), as well as a wide variety of Nerdcore webcomics (Penny Arcade, User Friendly, PvP, and Megatokyo are all popular nerd comics). Last but not least, the group mainly discussed in this paper, Nerdfighters, is a popular way to show nerd pride in the internet community.

Now one might be curious about what a Nerdfighter is, and how the organization was founded. Brotherhood 2.0, the first form of the Vlogbrother’s video logs, was started in January 2007 by Hank Green as a year-long project between him and his brother, John, in which the two would communicate without using text at all- i.e., communicating through video log (vlog for short) or on the phone was acceptable, but an email was not. The Brotherhood 2.0 project began to rouse a certain amount of following; enough so that when the project ended in December, 2007, the two continued to make vlogs and post them on YouTube under the username “vlogbrothers.” They have amassed over 75 million views, 1.1 million Twitter followers, and over 800 videos since their original vlog.

John Green, born August 24, 1977, is the older Green brother and a New York Times bestselling author. Since the origin of Nerdfighters and the vlogbrothers channel, he has written four books (Looking for Alaska, An Abundance of Katherines, Paper Towns, and Will Grayson, Will Grayson, the last of which was co-written with David Levithan) and a variety of short stories. He won the 2009 Edgar Award, the 2006 Michael L. Prince Award, and has twice been a finalist for the Lost Angeles Times Book Prize. He was also a New York Times Book Review and Booklist reviewer. His short story titles include, “The Approximate Cost of Loving Caroline,” “Great American Morp,” and “Zombiecorns,” the last of which is not about zombie unicorns, but instead zombies who enjoy worshipping corn. Besides writing, he enjoys religion (he identifies as Episcopalian), Mark Twain, the last words of famous people, Judy Bloom, literature, librarians, and conjoined twins. While Hank is the one who came up with the idea for Brotherhood 2.0, John is the one who really maintains it. One of his most notable quotes on nerds is as such:

Saying, ‘I notice you’re a nerd’ is like saying, ‘Hey, I notice that you’d rather be intelligent than be stupid, that you’d rather be thoughtful than vapid, that you believe there are things that matter more than the arrest record of Lindsay Lohan. (Nerd- Brotherhood 2.0)

Hank Green, born May 5, 1980, is the younger Green brother and a resident of Missoula, Montana. Where John Green can be considered a literary nerd, Hank prefers science and mathematics. He has, however, written for the publication mental_floss on numerous occasions, and has also wrote an article for the New York Times in July of 2010. He has also done work for the Weather Channel, NPR’s “All Things Considered,” Air America’s “The Young Turks,” Planet Green, and Forcast Earth. Hank is the founder and Editor in Chief of EcoGeek, a website that combines intelligence and nerdiness with a desire to save the earth. Officially, he is a webpage designer, but he also like music, corn dogs, books, Star Wars, Harry Potter, and guitar.

Having established the origin of Brotherhood 2.0 and the Vlogbrothers, it is also necessary to explain how the word Nerdfighter came to be and what a Nerdfighter is. The term was first coined in a February 1, 2007 Brotherhood 2.0 video titled, “In Whic John Miraculously Uploads a Video in the Savannah Airport Despite Not Having a Power Chord,” when John discovers an arcade game titled “Nerd Fighters.” The term gained its current meaning alter in that same month, when John’s ongoing lecture on the “war between nerds and popular people” and “people who fight with their brains” coincided with the fanbase that followed the Vlogbrothers. February 15, 2007 marks the date on which John stated, for the first time, the quote that any Nerdfighter will say if asked what the word mean- “A Nerdfighter is like a regular person, except instead of being composed out of tissues and cells and organs, they are made entirely out of awesome.”

The far more realistic definition of the word, however, is someone who fits most of or some of the nerdy characteristics (intelligent, intellectual, dedicated, and possibly slightly obsessive) and who is also determined to make the world a better place through charity and positivity. Nerdfighters generally visit the Nerdfighters website fairly regularly, watch the Vlogbrothers videos, and participate in their projects whenever possible. Nerdfighters are also known to generally have one or several of the following “powers,” or nerdy interests among others. A Nerdfighter power could include Harry Potter, Weird Al, English, Dungeons and Dragons, rock climbing, band, guitar, computers, mathematics, literature, video games, opera, hippy, Wikipedia, the Muppets, musical theatre, comic books, classic RPGs, Grammar Nazi (the word is used, here, in the nicest of ways), Doctor Who, StarKidPotter, the Lord of the Rings, space, vaulting, gymnastics, Glee, history, or language.

When Nerdfighters were asked what they considered the key components of the group, for the most part, they replied that the most important thing was a desire to be a part of the group- and in the Vlogbrothers FAQ video, they very succinctly state that anyone can be a Nerdfighter, no matter their age, gender, or sexual preference. Otherwise, most said something like, “...Dedication, [a] thirst for knowledge, [a] sense of humor, [and wanting to be] a generally good person.” Another Nerdfighter said, “[Someone who] is interested in the world around them, and works to decrease world suck and increase world awesome in whatever way they choose,” and yet another said, “A pursuit of knowledge and a willingness to make a change for the betterment of the world (Anonymous Interviews).

The group is founded solely on the ideas and actions of two people, and has evolved to become something far larger. Also, it is without most of the usual issues caused by internet anonymity, where people use their ability to function without risk of social punishment to be rude and impolite, and instead is full of people who support and learn from each other. Nerdfighters are an interesting example of internet communities, where the community didn’t come together based around some sort of fictional media... or around a common place... but instead around people, and the ideas those people espouse. And it’s overwhelmingly positive, as an internet community. (Anonymous Interview)
When faced with the concern many adults raise when it comes to cyber bullying and internet communication, Nerdfighters are unanimous in both their politeness is stating that the concern is a valid one, and also their wholehearted belief that one should not avoid all people spoken to through the internet out of concern of meeting one bad. All people surveyed replied with an example of a friendship that never would have been formed without the Nerdfighter community, and a firm statement about the positive relationships that could be made through the semi-anonymity of the computer. Many people who fit the qualifications of “nerd” aren’t used to a whole lot of social interaction, and having time to think before typing their responses to a conversation offers them the opportunity to communicate without feeling like a fool. Nerdfighters is a safe place to meet people with similar interests. One interview subject said, “Online socializing can really benefit teens. It’s great to get honest, semi-anonymous advice from those outside of your life,” and another mention how being called a name by someone you’ve never spoken to before and have the ability to avoid in future is far less biting than if someone you’ve known for years and face daily had said it to you. (Anonymous Interviews)

Nerdfighters has also made many of its members feel as though they could make a difference in the world. “...John and Hank’s story, along with that of Esther Earl, have showed me how just a few people can affect the lives of many.” (Honora Johnston Interview) (Esther Earl is well known and was well-loved throughout the Nerdfighter community; she was a huge supporter of the organization and that of the Harry Potter Alliance until her death last year from cancer.) Others have stated just how empowered and inspired they feel by the projects organized by the group, and how the things they do can make a difference. I absolutely [consider the Vlogbrothers my role models]. They have both achieved their dreams- writing and environmental activism. they gave shown me that it is possible to achieve what you want. (Honora Johnston Interview)

The group has also had a huge impact on its members’ knowledge of current events, diversity, science, history, and education. The Nerdfighters surveyed claim that Hank and John are able to explain science and literature/current events topics (respectively) far more clearly than any of their teachers has ever been able to. One Nerdfighter says that
John explains ... why I should care about [current events] as opposed to throwing out numbers and statistics. Brotherhood 2.0 and the Project for Awesome have really opened my mind to how much needs to be done, and how much can be done.

John and Hank show empathy and understanding for those around the world that are different from themselves, and are therefore great role models for teens in a world that, for the most part, only helps others when it benefits themselves. As far as history goes, generally all NFs agree that the videos make the learning experience far more memorable than if the information had just been read out of a textbook, and it gives an example to budding teachers of a way to make a class far more interesting. One Nerdfighter, an education major, says she looks a lot at how they teach, so she can get ideas of how to do so in more traditional settings. Hank and John also offer a ton of information that might not regularly come up in a course or in everyday life, like the life of Queen Ranavalona I and Ivan the Terrible’s hidden library. “I’m a life-long student,” one Vlogbrothers video watcher says, “and I love learning everything I possibly can. The videos have made me more aware of little snippets of history that might have been overlooked in a course. As far as science goes,” she says, “they give me real life applications for the topics; for example, Hank’s EcoGeek.”

An overwhelming number of members replied that they felt it had raised awareness that being nerdy wasn’t necessarily a bad thing when asked about the effects of Nerdfighters. Being a nerd used to be- and still is, in some places- frowned upon, but Hank and John have given nerds a place to go and a community to be a part of. Nerds can be proud of their determination and intelligence here. For a group of people that has always suffered from social difficulties, almost by definition, and has, as a general rule, felt alienated for their intelligence and obsessive nature, Nerdfighters offers the outcasts a place to feel included, a reminder that “normal” isn’t necessarily a box everyone has to fit into. Really, it shows teens struggling with their own self-confidence that they are not alone in their interests and habits.
I think it espouses the idea that... it really is okay to be who you are- a lot of media marketed towards teenagers pretends like they mean this, but they only mean it if you’re white, or straight, or pretty, or athletic. But really, in Nerdfighters, you can be your weird, nerdy self, as long as you’re nice to people. And it makes the idea of contributing to other people, even in little ways, seem more doable for teenagers. And it gives younger people a voice, during a time in their life when they might not feel like they have one, and a community where they’re allowed to just kind of be. (Anonymous Interview)

Nerdfighters, as a whole, has offered teens who are intellectual and passionate about things a place to go where they will feel included; a supportive group of people that reminds them that they are not alone, while also helping encourage a wider world view and a respect of the diversity of others. It also encourages charity and life-long learning, informing its members of current events and historical ones, as well as explaining math, science, and education, leaving it a clear representation of the good that can be found in the internet, despite the seas of bad.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

My response to people's apparent desire for a school for internet nerds.

This afternoon, Hannah mentioned in passing how fantastic she thought it would be if there was a school full of just awesome people, and all the non-awesomes were sent away. Of course, she intended it quite innocently, but it started an extensive line of thought on my end about what such a school would, indeed, entail.
The very first, very obvious question one has to ask themselves is, who would be able to attend this school? Who is, in the minds of this school’s admissions board, ‘awesome?’ Would this school fall for the same, typical school issue of defining greatness on academics and testing scores alone? Hannah’s school seems to more be the student’s idea of awesome, a friendly, ‘cool,’ maybe slightly eccentric person who would frequent Tumblr and take slightly hipster photos of themselves. And this raises the other interesting question of, when did the word ‘awesome’ begin to take on this connotation (at least in this community, the community Hannah means when she speaks of a school of merely awesome people) of someone slightly nerdy, the kind of person who reads John Green books and Harry Potter and enjoys Nutella? The answer is, quite obviously to anyone OUTSIDE of this community, that this image is what the majority of the people in the group identify with. That is awesome because it’s what they are; that is awesome because it’s the social norm. In a community of students who all focus very hard academically, the person who is most adept at this is awesome; but, as is far more often the case, a community of students who do poorly academically and focus more on athletics will alienate an academically adept teen and socially reward the receiver of the most sports achievements as opposed to scholastic ones, despite the more obvious applicability of an intelligent student gaining approval in a place of learning. So, in point- people associate awesomeness with themselves, and the social norm of the group in question, and associate uncoolness with someone who is either obviously better at something than them, or very obviously worse, as it is often deemed ‘uncool’ to hang out with someone who doesn’t have many skills and is considered unpopular by the masses and those who are Awesome. Tumblr and Hannah’s definition of awesome reflect this, even through the anonymity of the internet- people on Tumblr who post pictures of themselves looking beautiful, who are artsy enough to create some art, who have a pretty face and a nice sense of humor and already plenty of friends- these people are more popular, are considered more unreachably godlike, than the people who can write thirty page papers on Awesomeness or who may be far more adept at computer skills, despite the fact that the whole area of interaction is through the computer. Obviously I am a poor person to speak to about awesomeness and cool because I clearly fall into the uncool category of the paper-writer.
Moving on, who is to judge this awesomeness? If ‘awesome’ is merely based off of one’s own ideals and abilities, then the Admissions Director of the School of Awesome would almost inevitably fall into the trap of placing anyone in the school who was similar to themselves, or who idealized them (because everyone likes people who like them). If there was no official admissions director, the school would be flooded with people who considered themselves awesome (because many people do, you know) and would lack some of the very most awesome people who consider themselves horribly uncool (because many of the best, most amazing people, in my opinion, are those who are honestly too humble to believe that of themselves- these people naturally gather a fair amount of background support but never really realize that their popularity is, in fact, popularity, and not pity or just normality. They are truly ignorant of their position). So, I believe the school would have to have an admissions director, merely because one of the main parts of the whole idea was that non-awesome people wouldn’t be allowed to attend. Would this be because they wouldn’t be admitted in the first place, and, if they were accidentally chosen for the school (like if a muggle were somehow let in to Hogwarts) they would be sent away by the school’s administration, or would they merely be chosen and sent away by the students themselves, like a larger, more inclusive version of a regular school’s ‘cool’ group, where those who did not fit in would actually be forced to leave the school?
On some level, all societies function on this basic idea- if you don’t fit in with everyone else, we don’t want you here. Schools try to prohibit this as much as possible, forcing students in and maintaining the balance between social classes as well as possible, and the students do it some themselves, too, allowing the formation of several different groups, where the nerds can be and the athletic people and the artsy ones, but there’s still a lot of alienation, where a certain student isn’t accepted in any of these ‘clicks,’ or goes to a school that’s small enough that there aren’t enough students to form the group that they would generally associate with.
On a wider level, most neighborhoods are like this- sitting up on the hill that overlooks Sunnyslope, where I live, I noticed how, for the most part, our entire little area is just one-level, white houses. The people there, living their own little individual unique lives, are still very much the same. Our neighborhood is lower middle class. Most of the people are Hispanic, and therefore share the same but slightly different households of large, Catholic families, with woman who cook and men who sit on the lawn and drink and children who watch noisy television and play basketball in the street. They are all very kind to us, but we do not fit in. We are not Catholic. We are not Hispanic. We are no lower middle class. There is only one child in our family, and the wife of our household works full time and does cooking only part of the time. We do not fit the social norm. We are not awesome. After living here for nearly sixteen years, we are the oldest family unit nearby, but we still do not fit as part of the community. When attending neighborhood events, we attract strange looks and no one starts conversation with us. We are not encouraged to leave, and only very rarely do we receive a gesture that is anything but polite, but if this was to be the only community my family participated in, if we had no other social endeavors, I am very certain that we would have left shortly after I was born.
I’m afraid that the school would attract people of all the same views and opinions, and start to stagnate. Without varying beliefs and thoughts, there is no growth; without rebellion, faulty systems are never improved. The internet and school systems that are forced to accept anyone allow for the debate that is required for thought on important issues; disagreement spawns interest and research into events outside your social bubble. As the attendee of a private school for the past nine years, I can honestly say that I have been very upset, on occasions, to be the only person at the school who is Democrat, who is not Catholic or Christian, who values environmental issues and animal rights. I have been alienated and bullied and hurt mentally and emotionally for my beliefs and my disagreement with the beliefs of other students. But I would not have traded in this experience for any other academic one, because I believe that facing this adversity has really helped me to establish what exactly it is that I believe, and this diversity from my own opinion in my school has helped me realize just how important it is. Of course, it would be an amazing relief to be at a school where I was accepted, and people shared my views and did not persecute me for them, but I wouldn’t learn anything from it. I wouldn’t learn what other views there are in the world, or how the struggles that others go through, or what differences there are between me and those coping with physical and mental stress I still can hardly fathom. Most importantly, however, I wouldn’t understand that even those who are different from me, who are better or worse than me at whatever individual respective talent is being described, can still be awesome.

Monday, March 21, 2011

IDEA project outline. (As a "DANG IT I'VE LEFT MY USB AT HOME! backup.)

The Effect of Nerdfighters on its Teenage Members Today

Thesis: The community created by Hank and John Green, known as Nerdfighters, has positively impacted teenagers’ knowledge of the wider world, literature, science, and music, as well as their ability to accept diversity and their interest in the well-being of their peers around the world.
I. Basic Background Information
A. The Nerdy Basics
1. Nerd Origin
a. The word is generally recognized as having come from Dr. Seuss’ “If I Ran the Zoo,” in which the narrator, Gerald McGrew, states that he would collect “a Nerkle, a Nerd, and a Seersucker too” for his zoo.
b. Phillip K. Dick claimed to have coined the similar “nurd.”
2. The Common Connotation
a. Origin of Connotation
i. In 1951. Newsweek reported on its popularity in Detroit.
ii. A 1965 Rensslaer PTI used “knurd” (the word “drunk” backwards) to describe someone who would prefer to stay in and study as opposed to party.
iii. In the 1960’s, the term spread throughout the US and Scotland as a popular synonym for “square” or “drip.” Only now did it begin to take on the current association with bookishness and social ineptitude.
3. What Makes a Nerd, a Nerd
a. Nerd Definition
i. “Nerd” is a term often used in a derogatory way to describe someone who passionately pursues intellectual activities or other obscure interests, rather than engage in more popular or social activities. Nerds are often excluded from physical activities by their peers and are considered loners. They often tend to associate with other, like-minded individuals.
ii. “...because nerds like us are allowed to be unironically enthusiastic about stuff. Nerds are allowed to love stuff, like jump-up-and-down-in-the-chair-can’t-control- yourself love it... when people call people nerds, mostly what they’re saying is, “You like stuff.” Which is just not a good insult at all. Like, ‘you are too enthusiastic about the miracle of human consciousness.’
b. Nerd Stereotypes and Characteristics
i. Intelligent but socially and physically awkward. Most people assume that all nerds are unfit- either very thin and weak or extremely obese.
ii. In the movies, they are often seen as white males with glasses, braces, acne, and highly lifted up pants, and many sport pocket protectors. There is also a common stereotype about young Asian males.
iii. Nerds commonly focus in things considered either overly mature or too young for them- nerds will tend to have a passion for math, science, technology, and classic literature, or trading cards, comics, RPGs, fantasy, and science fiction. These passions also lead to a stereotype that all nerds suffer from OCD, and have an extreme devotion to the rules and the ”nerdy” things that they love.
c. Nerd Pride
i. As the computer industry rose, “nerdy” technologically savvy people gained large fortunes and prestige, and the connotation became less about awkwardness and more about smarts.
ii. People began to realize that some nerdiness is good- intelligent, respectful, and interesting people earn more money.
(a) “My idea is to present an image to children that it is good to be intellectual, and not to care about peer pressures to be anti-intellectual. I want every child to turn into a nerd- where that means someone who prefers studying and learning to competing for social dominance, which can unfortunately cause the downward spiral into social rejection.” –Katie Hanfner as quoted by the New York Times, 29 Aug. 1993
(b) “Be nice to nerds. Chances are you’ll end up working for one.” –Charles J. Sykes
iii. TV shows, movies, and the media started to encourage nerdiness- see such things as Revenge of the Nerds in 1984, Nerdator, and FC Nerds.
(a) “...What they lack in physical strength, they make up in brain power. Who writes all the best selling books? Nerds. Who directs the top grossing Hollywood movies? Nerds. Who creates the highly advanced technology that only they can understand? ...Nerds. And who are the people who run for the high office of the Presidency? No one but nerds.” –ep. “Nerdator,” Freakazoid
(b) The news website, Slashdot, bears the slogan, “News for nerds. Stuff that matters.”
iv. Celebrations of Nerdiness
(a) Nerd Pride Day – May 25 in Spain ever since 2006
(b) Nerdcore hip hop- MC Plus +, MC Hawking, MC Frontalot
(c) Nerdcore webcomics- Penny Arcade, User Friendly, PvP, Megatokyo
(d) Nerdfighters!
B. The Nerdfighter Basics
1. Brotherhood 2.0 and the Vlogbrothers
a. Founded in Jan. 2007 by Hank as a year long project between Hank and John
b. Planned to spend a year communicating only through video, phone, and other forms of non-text related communication
c. Continued the project after 2007, amassing over 75 million views, 1.1 million Twitter followers, and nearly 800 videos.
2. John Green
a. Born August 24, 1977, he is the older Green brother and New York Times bestselling author.
i. Looking for Alaska- a novel about a boy named Pudge who is obsessed with the last words of famous people, and his experiences and growth at a private school in Alabama with his new friends Takumi, the Colonel, and an unforgettable girl named Alaska.
(a) “Thomas Edison’s last words were, “It’s very beautiful over there. I don’t know where there is, but I believe it’s somewhere, and I hope it’s beautiful.”
ii. An Abundance of Katherines- Chronicles the crazy road trip of an anagram-obsessed, washed-out child prodigy Colin who has dated (and been dumped by) nineteen different girls all named Katherine, and his mission to discover a formula that will predict the future of any and every relationship.
(a) “Books are the ultimate Dumpees: put them down and they’ll wait for you forever; pay attention to them and they’ll always love you back.”
iii. Paper Towns- Quentin has always idolized and adored the fantastic and perfect Margo Roth Spiegelman. But when Margo takes him on a wild, all-night-long adventure and then leaves with nothing but a morbid series of clues, Quentin is forced to realize that even those we deem perfect have problems with their self-image and beliefs.
(a) “"Look at all those cul-de-sacs, the streets that turn in on themselves all the houses that were built to fall apart. All those paper people in their paper houses burning the furniture to stay warm. All the paper kids drinking the beer some bum bought for them at the paper convenience store. Everyone demented with the mania of owning things. All the things paper-thin and paper-frail."
iv. Will Grayson, Will Grayson (co-wr. w/ David Levithan) – In which two characters named Will Grayson (one, JG’s, who is trying desperately to live life without being noticed, while also being friends with a man who is described as ‘the largest person who is also very, very, gay’, and the other, DL’s, who is struggling with depression and a complex relationship with online friend who is actually made up by his enemy Maura) meet up and deal with their problems and their individual relationships with the large and gay Tiny.
(a) “Tiny Cooper is not the world’s gayest person, and he is not the world’s largest person, but I believe he may be the world’s largest person who is really, really gay, and also the gayest person who is also really, really large.”
v. Has won the 2009 Edgar Award, the 2006 Michael L. Printz Award, and has twice been a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize.
vi. He was also a New York Times Book Review and Booklist reviewer.
vii. Short story titles include, “The Approximate Cost of Loving Caroline,” “Great American Morp,” and “Zombiecorns,” the last of which is not about zombie unicorns, but instead, zombies who worship corn.
b. Besides writing his own books, he enjoys religion (he’s Episcopalian), Mark Twain, the last words of famous people, Judy Bloom, literature, librarians, books, and conjoined twins.
c. While Hank was the one who came up with the idea for Brotherhood 2.0, it is really John’s project.
d. Another of John’s memorable quotes on nerds (besides the “you like stuff” one) is the following: “Saying, ‘I notice that you’re a nerd’ is like saying, ‘Hey, I notice that you’d rather be intelligent than be stupid, that you’d rather be thoughtful than vapid, that you believe that there are things that matter more than the arrest record of Lindsay Lohan.”
3. Hank Green
a. Born May 5, 1980, Hank is the younger Green brother. He lives in Missoula, MT.
b. Where John in the literary nerd, Hank prefers science and mathematics. He has however, written for the magazine mental_floss on numerous occasions, and also wrote an article for the New York Times on July 24, 2010. He has also done work for the Weather Channel, Planet Green, NPR’s All Thing’s Considered, Air America’s The Young Turks, and Forcast Earth.
c. Hank is the founder and editor in chief of “EcoGeek,” a website that combines intelligence and nerdiness with a desire to save the earth.
d. Officially, his job is “webpage designer,” but he also likes music, corn dogs, books, Star Wars, Harry Potter, and guitar.
4. Nerdfighters
a. Origin
i. The term was first coined in a February 1, 2007 video titled, “In Which John Miraculously Uploads a Video in the Savannah Airport Desite Not Having a Power Cord,” when John discovers an arcade name titled ‘Nerd Fighters.’
ii. The term gained its current connotation later in that same month, with John’s ongoing lecture on the “war between nerds and popular people” and “people who fight with their brains.”
iv. On February 15, 2007, John said, for the first time, the quote that any Nerdfighter will say if asked what a Nerdfighter is- “A Nerdfighter is like a regular person, except instead of being composed out of tissues and cells and organs, they are made entirely out of awesome.”
b. Definition
i. Someone who fits most or some of the nerdy characteristics- intelligent, intellectual, dedicated, slightly obsessive- and who is also determined to make the world a better place through charity and positivity. Nerdfighters generally visit the Nerdfighter Ning and the website Your Pants fairly regularly, watch the Vlogbrothers videos, and participate in their projects whenever possible.
ii. Nerdfighters are known to generally have one or several of the following “powers,” or nerdy interests, among others.
(a.) Harry Potter, Weird Al, word, English, Dungeons and Dragons, rock climbing, band, guitar, computers, mathematics, literature, video games, opera, hippy, Wikipedia, the Muppets, musical theatre, comic books, classic RPGs, Grammar Nazi, Doctor Who, StarKidPotter, the Lord of the Rings, space, vaulting, gymnastics, Glee, history, or language.
II. Effects
A. What Nerdfighters say are some key components.
1. “[...Someone who] is interested in he world around them, and works to decrease world suck and increase world awesome in whatever way they choose (sometimes that could be monetarily like donating to the Project for Awesome, sometimes that could be by doing something cool, sometimes that could be by doing something kind... the options are limitless!)”
2. “A pursuit of knowledge and a willingness to make a change for the betterment of the world.”
3. “...Dedication, [a] thirst for knowledge, [a] sense of humor, [and wanting to be] a generally good person.
4. “A desire to become a Nerdfighter- that’s the only requirement to become a Nerdfighter. However, most Nerdfighters tend to be nerdy (naturally) about all sorts of things, awesome, and they want to make the world suck less.”
5. Basically, the most important parts of Nerdfighters are an interest in learning, a desire to make the world better and more interesting! If one wants to pursue betterment and knowledge, then they are already Nerdfighters.
B. Why Nerdfighters think the group is worth studying.
1. “...Nerdfighters are an interesting example of internet communities, where the community didn’t come together based around some sort of fictional media... or around a common place...but instead around people, and the ideas those people espouse. And it’s overwhelmingly positive, as an internet community... It’s also... a good example of a community forming a common vocabulary and syntax based around common experience, and how new members of that community are socialized through that shared vocabulary (in less pretentious terms, we’ve got inside jokes, and lots of them.)”
2. “It merits research because it’s phenomenal that just two people have started a whole community of awesome much bigger than just them. It is a testament on how amazing human beings can be if we work together for good, that just two brothers have started this whole thing through just a set of video logs.” (Honora Johnston)
3. “...we are anonymous... and can choose not to reveal our real names and faces. In many cases, this can result in deindividuation [where someone, in the right circumstances or surroundings, can lose their sense of self and do horrible things they might not do normally, say, if there were a chance that the deed could be traced back to them] and all sorts of nasty things. So online communities like this one are without all the social constructs, an area ripe for research. Nerdfighteria in particular is interesting because people are, for the most part, generally civil. Creativity and discussion are encouraged rather than conformity.”
4. In summary, it is a group founded solely on the ideas and actions of two people, and has evolved to become something far larger. Also, it is without most of the usual issues caused by internet anonymity, where people use their ability to function without risk of punishment to be rude and impolite, and instead support each other and learn from each other.
C. When faced with the concern many adults raise when it comes to cyber bullying and internet communication, Nerdfighters responded as so:
1. “This is always valid, but on the flip side, just as you may meet many negative people you never would have spoken to otherwise, you also come into contact with positive people that build friendships with you that you never would have otherwise. This is near and dear to my heart, as I was bullied and friendless in middle school, but found comfort and friendship online. my main advice for parents is for parents to talk to their kids, ask them what they’re up to and about their lives online; trying to install filters or spy on them only makes them more secretive, and they will probably be able to get around whatever security measures are installed.”
2. “You must be careful, but when people are speaking to each other face to face through something such as Skype, it’s almost the same as meeting someone in real life. I’m sure there are bad people on Nerdfighters, but there are so many good people that one shouldn’t just avoid it out of fear of the bad, and should open yourself up to a wide variety of good friendships instead.” (HJ)
3. “...When I was younger, there wasn’t a safe place on the internet to meet good people, and if I found a group of people, they’d disregard me because of my age... Then, when I lied, saying I was 16 or 18 so someone would take me seriously, I was relentlessly hit on by creepy old men, just for being a girl. Sometimes I would say I was a 17 year old male to be left alone. ...I found a great community of people [through the internet] that were interested in creative endeavors and became very close to them... I still consider them great friends, after over five years. Some live in Ireland, or Australia. Those are places I’ve never been, but I have friends there. ...[Some kids abuse the internet] but cyberbullies can be stopped very easily if one just screenshots or saves conversations. ...Without the internet, I’d have about 70% less friends, no place to vent my frustations, [and] I’d be much less intelligent (most of my information comes from the internet really)...
4. “Online socializing can benefit teens. It’s great to get honest, semi- anonymous advice from those outside of your life. Nerdfighters is an especially supportive community.”
5. “I don’t find this a very valid concern. ...In real life, people can physically hurt you, or can bully you over much more prolonged periods of time, except with real-life bullying you can’t just leave the forum or change your username or block them from your Facebook account. I’ve been a heavy internet user for a long while... and I’ve been bullied... a lot less online than in person. ...Someone calling you –insert cruel and insensitive word of your choosing here- online has less of an impact than if someone you’ve known for years in real life does the same.”
D. Nerdfighters has made its members feel like you they can make a difference.
1. “...John and Hank’s story, along with that of Esther Earl [a huge participant in the Nerdfighter community and also the service organization Harry Potter Alliance, who recently passed away from cancer at the age of seventeen] have showed me how just a few people can affect thousands of lives.” (HJ)
2. “I feel empowered and inspired by both our large projects that the entire community takes part in, as well as the small scale projects that people share.”
3. “I feel like the small things I do can actually make a difference in people’s lives now. I felt this way most of the time before Nerdfighters, but the whole movement of NF have helped make it an even bigger part of my life. I try to smile in all situations, and I’m getting DFTBA [a popular initialism in the community, standing for Don’t Forget To Be Awesome] tattooed on my left wrist as a reminder. I strive to be awesome every day, and I feel like it makes a big difference in my life and other’s.
4. “I look up to [the Vlogbrothers] as older people who are nerdsome but use their nerdiness for good, and have good and interesting careers they love, and a good relationship with their family...”
5. I absolutely [consider Hank and John Green my role models]. They have both achieved their dreams’ writing and environmental activism. They have shown me that it is possible to achieve what you want.” HJ
E. Current events, diversity.
1. “”My knowledge of current events has definitely increased, and I love that John and Hank are both awesome guys that show empathy and understanding for those around the world that are different from themselves.’
2. “Nerdfighters has broadened my perspective of the world outside of my little bubble of social interaction, work, and school. I’ve learned all sorts of things about... current events- for example, John recently made a video on the revolution in Egypt from which I learned much.”
3. “It has helped me a lot with my World Studies class, and being more aware of what is going on around the world. John explains things around the world very clearly in his current events videos, and why I should care about it, as opposed to throwing out numbers and statistics.”
4. Brotherhood 2.0 and the Project for Awesome [an annual charity project in which Nerdfighters support and popularize their favorite charities through YouTube] have really opened my mind to how much needs to be done and how much can be done, as well as how many charities there are around the world.
F. History, Science, education.
1. “...My knowledge of history has definitely increased, and the videos make it more memorable than if I had just learned it in a textbook.”
2. “...As an education major, I look a lot at how they teach and inform people for ideas of how to do so in more traditional settings, so their educational videos are always interesting for me to look at.”
3. “...I’ve learned a lot from Nerdfighters about science (I definitely understand it better when Hank explains it than any science teacher I’ve ever had) and history (same thing as science except when John explains) and I’ve learned random and amazing things from both of them (The Terrible Library, how nuclear plants work, etc.) It’s not necessarily knowledge I’ll apply anywhere in life, but it’s information I’m glad to have because it enriches my life by knowing it. I’m a life-long student, and I love learning everything I possibly can.”
4. “John’s French Revolution videos have really helped me with my history class, and have also made me more aware of little snippets of history that might have been otherwise overlooked in a course, like Queen Ranavalona. As far as science goes, they give me real life applications for the topics, for example, Hank’s EcoGeek.”
G. Effect on the Wider World
1. “The Project for Awesome has grown hugely since its first few years, raising not only money for charity but also interest in charity, as well as gaining popularity for the group [Nerdfighters], and therefore increasing it’s effectiveness even more.”
2.“It has made being a nerd less of a stigma and more of a thing to be proud of. When John and Hank started, being a nerd was frowned upon, but now us nerds have a place to go, people to talk to, and we can be proud of our intelligence and willingness to learn.”
3. “I think it espouses the idea that... it really is okay to be who you are- a lot of media marketed towards teenagers pretends like they mean this, but they only mean it if you’re white, or straight, or pretty, or athletic. But really, in Nerdfighters, you can be your weird, nerdy self, as long as you’re nice to people. And it makes the idea of contributing to other people, even in little ways, seem more doable for teenagers. And it gives younger people a voice, during a time in their life when they might not feel like they have one, and a community where they’re allowed to just kind of be.”
4. “I think it has helped a lot of people to become more comfortable in their own skin. In many places, “nerd” is derogatory, but here it is a badge of honor. Seeing that other people like similar things is a reminder that not everyone has to fit whatever the definition of “normal” is... I think it has helped connect teens to people and feel like they are part of something larger. ...It can start to feel like everything is a show and we are always observers sitting on the sidelines. Interaction and relationship are good ways to be reminded that we don’t have to be apathetic.”
III. Conclusion