The incessant reappearance of old material … and of course about appearance

FRIDAY, 24 DECEMBER 2004

I can say I am overdoing it at the moment; that I have to stop with this incessant revision of old material. But what it is about is the synchronisation of internal and external appearances. If I appear to myself … if I exist in my apartment, I am a writer – but more than that, I am a writer down of fantastic insights I believe I do not so much think as receive.

The moment I enter the world outside my apartment, and especially if I make social appearances, I am just a 33-year-old man of South African origin, Afrikaans in terms of language and culture, who has been living in Taiwan for the past six years, making money – like hundreds of other Westerners in this city – as an English teacher, and who is most of the time not seen with an intimate partner. That’s it.

It’s no longer good enough. External appearances must necessarily be reviewed.

MONDAY, 27 DECEMBER 2004

Another thing: self-observation, self-definition, appearance … self-observation, self-definition, appearance … It is an ongoing process. Patterns are established that are repeated; adjustments are made; inaccurate information and appearances that are not in line with your view of yourself are corrected; new aspects of identity, or aspects that are more appropriate for the environment in which you find yourself are defined; more appearances are made; you again observe your “self”; again you consider things, you redefine, you re-appear …

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Appearances, gifts that serve an agenda, and a few other thoughts

[The idea of appearing to a certain young woman as I see myself forced me to come up with a plan to circulate some of my written material to selected individuals on an occasion where I knew she would be present. The opportunity that would serve this goal best turned out to be Christmas dinner at a friend’s house.

I had known by this time that the target of my attention would go to my friend’s apartment early on Christmas morning to help with preparations. I offered to meet them during the course of the morning with a delivery of fresh junk food.

The evil plan I had already devised the previous week was to hand each of the ladies a neatly stapled booklet as “just something to read” with their Kentucky Fried Chicken and delicious Portuguese egg tarts. I would then patiently wait for a response – perfectly aware of the possibility that it could be negative. (I suspected that I would be able to have a conversation about the material at the New Year’s party a week later.)

The initial plan was to compile excerpts from all three volumes of “The Personal Agenda”. This process began on Wednesday, 15 December 2004 with revisions and improvements being made at a feverish pace.

By Friday, 24 December, however, I threw my arms in the direction of the ceiling and at 01:45 wrote in my notebook: Compromise – appear as the author of … excerpts from the FINAL CHAPTER.

And so it happened that three women each received on Christmas morning 2004 as provisions for the day a Kentucky Zinger, a fresh pastry, and a freshly printed copy of “Excerpts from the FINAL CHAPTER” (with tables of contents of the three volumes).

The review process has, as usual, led to new insights.]

THURSDAY, 23 DECEMBER 2004

17:44

I am going through old material at the moment. Two things are abundantly clear:

1. I have been most miserable in the past ten-plus years at times when I did not write, and the happiest at times when I did write.

2. Times when I had to make a social appearance were periods of intense self-examination and uncertainty about who and what I am, and as who and what I appear to the community.

20:47

You cannot appear as a writer if you do not have a book in your hand, or on a public bookshelf. Book on the computer? Not good enough. Printed manuscript on your desk? Not good enough …

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Short trip – processes – phrases – choices

SUNDAY, 19 DECEMBER 2004

Small discovery after a short trip

I have rediscovered the value of music on a train, and in other public appearances. I listened to The Offspring on the way from Tainan to Kaohsiung, and then started listening to AC/DC at Kaohsiung station. The latter (specifically a track on the album Ballbreaker) filled me with such passion that I was prepared to shove people out of the way to get to the ticket booth. Two young ladies on the train to Fengshan couldn’t help peering at me under their eyelashes, and when I appeared with the same passion at Fengshan station, a group of young gang members almost attacked me because they saw the threat in my eyes.

[It makes me wonder: what can one do to manipulate your mood, and specifically in such a way that it is conducive to achieving constructive results?]

WEDNESDAY, 22 DECEMBER 2004

Processes that are conducive

Coming to Taiwan, spending a lot of time on my own, thinking about things and writing were all conducive to me formulating what I had been given, defining who I want to be and choosing a role that would be appropriate for me.

For another person parenthood, having a child of their own, can be conducive to achieving similar results – or if not similar, maybe good enough for that person to bring about an existential condition that I will be able to recognise as similar to my own state of existence.

On phrases and choices

“To find yourself” ~ the conventional phrase

“To confront what you have been given; to define who you want to be within the framework of what you have been given as well as particular time and place and needs of the community; to decide what role is the most appropriate for you taking into account all the above, and then to take actions to become this who-and-what” ~ my choice of words

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Three orange thoughts

SUNDAY, 19 DECEMBER 2004

I. Why do some Christians sometimes “slide” back to their “old ways”? One possible reason is because they are not comfortable with their new religious identities – identities which they themselves did not define but that was prescribed to them. (Which gives me a new idea: given, chosen, and prescribed?)

II. Occasionally one comes across a reference to the proverbial “peasant” – and to be honest, I also find the label useful from time to time. How would one define this type of person? A “peasant” is someone who does not question what was given to him or her, and who spend their days eating, sleeping, working, screwing, and spending time with other “peasants”. Of course this is a simplistic caricature, as is usually the case with labels, even though one if occasionally tempted to employ it.

My problem with the “peasant” label is that many good people are painted with this brush – kind, generous people. Also, the caricature is apparently brainless. If he is not and he takes a break from eating, sleeping, working, screwing, and spending time with other “peasants” and think about things from time to time, is he still a “peasant”?

III. People sometimes refer to other people who are “full” of themselves. My question is, what are they full of – of what was given to them, or of something they themselves have accomplished? Also, what is the opposite of being “full” of yourself?

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Insights on Friday, 17 December 2004 as they arrived

1) A woman walks out of a religious paraphernalia shop. I see she’s pregnant. I look at her face and reckon there and then she does not look too “academic”. I think: one option for a man who has his own ideas about life and who is not eager to water down his values and principles is to hook up with a woman he does not regard as his equal.

The condition for success in such a relationship is that he must be wealthy. He should be the “boss” in the traditional sense where the man is the head of the household, and also in the modern sense in which the person with the most money has the most say in how things are run. The woman in this case does not have to “know her place” as was the case in some communities fifty or hundred years ago; she does not have to stand around barefoot in the kitchen the whole day; and when she says she has borne enough children, the man will accept it without reservation. But he will be the “boss” in the sense that the household will generally be managed according to his ideas and opinions.

The other extreme – for the sake of getting to a more ideal middle ground – is exactly the opposite: a woman who is this man’s intellectual superior, his mentor, his provider …

In the middle is a woman he would consider as his intellectual equal; a woman with whom he can have meaningful arguments and with whom he will share equal responsibility and authority in the management of their household; a woman whose personal agenda and life philosophy will be consistent with his own; a woman whose emotional, physical and spiritual needs he will regard as his concern, just like she will regard his.

2) During class, a few minutes later, I am trying to teach the English names of a dozen vegetables to a group of five-year-olds. I ask a child – a new pupil – something in Chinese, and I reckon he doesn’t seem too surprised that a Westerner, not one of “his people”, can speak Chinese. I also think, “[to be continued]”

* * *

New insight! Is there such a thing as “Satisfied Given Self”? I believe it is a matter of degree of satisfaction, on a spectrum ranging from “absolute self-contempt, danger to self and society” to “convinced she is an incarnation of one or more gods”. (Interesting that in both cases the person has a good chance of being locked up in a mental institution.)

In the middle you get … shall we say, 99% of the adult population? The formula, Confront (accept, change), Define, and Become is therefore valid for more than nine out of every ten people!

Question: Information, options and possibilities still come from a particular source. What is this source? Mostly the Given Source, and in the case of a minority, from More Than Just Given Source.

Another question: What is your Given Source?

Last question: What is given? (Compile a list …)

* * *

(Back to the previous note)

So I thought: It is quite possible that this child expects that all adults can speak (at least) Chinese, for it is his given language, and so far he has had no reason to question the phenomenon of Chinese as absolute language.

When will he question the absolute value of the Chinese language? When he is confronted with, or when he finds himself in an environment where a different language such as English or Japanese or Spanish is considered by most members of the community as the dominant language.

It is at this moment, when it becomes clear what was previously regarded as absolute is not the only option that the sparks start flying on the work table of identity.

[Another example that can be mentioned is that of a young person who spent his or her formative years in relative isolation, who regards not only particular language but also particular religious frame of reference as absolute. What happens when this young person is thrust into an environment where a different language and other religious symbols are regarded as standard or dominant? Of course, personality and particular situation will play a significant role, but chances are that this person will then start to ask questions of people they regard as authority figures, and will ultimately develop a different identity than would have been the case if their lives continued to be played out in relative isolation.]

3) Next class I thought about some linguists who reckon children shouldn’t be taught a “foreign” language at a too early age, as in the case of English in Taiwan.

I thought, if English is offered from an early age as a given especially at home – the main source of givenness, it will not be questioned but wholly absorbed along with all other given data.

I then wondered what information parents – as primary givers of data – do in fact give their children, not only in terms of language, but in terms of moral values, behaviour, and especially for later use, possibilities for an adult life. Of course, a thousand voices will go up in a hundred different languages all giving different answers, or similar ones, with different details. My point, however, is this: change what is given, and you fundamentally affect the end result. (And do parents know what they give?)

Finally, I realised I did not receive all these informative snippets of data lying in bed or sitting at the computer. I got them in classrooms filled with noisy children, and out in the street on the way to the classrooms.

Conclusion? Outside appearances do serve a purpose, and in many cases act as stimuli for new views and insights.

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