Shame on the unwashed who thoughtlessly seem unable to differentiate the dissimilarity in essence that divides a computer keyboard and one played upon powerfully by
Liberace or pounded upon forcefully by the fiery Jerry Lee! Oh, how far has the
never very noble Spam now fallen from
its wartime usage as a marker for government-produced, cheap, mixed meat to its
contemporary reference to the unwanted and quickly-consigned-to-electronic-hell
of today’s easy come, easy go communication! And what has become of the serious
obligation of equally serious deletion?
Where is today’s cutting room floor?
Those who vociferously bemoan the disastrous decline in what was once considered polite, civil discourse might well spend a few well-chosen words of grief over the corruption of common communication. In addition to the sharp descent of civil conversation in the public electronic square, is it grammatically correct, always, insistently and increasingly to be angry?
O, brother, where art thou? Where have all the blessed beatitudes
gone, long time passing? Blessed are those who need not place LOL after their messages to communicate
their humorous intentions! Blessed is he or she whose written words can stand
the light of clever inquisition without a preemptive smiley face! How sideways have become our smirking smiles, how crooked our occasional grinning
communication! Those that live by spell-check
shall face an equal and equivalent death!
How curious has the malfeasance of our modern speech
construction become! How wearifying the written art is fast de-evolving!
Perhaps nowhere is this language loss more obvious that the steep degradation
of the treasured old-English word friend.
“There is a friend that stickest closer than a brother,” it was once said and
believed, in King James English; but modern friends seem to have little elasticity and even less stickability!
To be a Face Book kind of friend is unlike any previous species of genuine
friendship and surely bears no resemblance to the Quaker kind. A true friend does
not ask to be liked! If it is sadly true that one can be unfriended and if friendship may indeed be a verb, isn’t it also
true that authentic friendships are rarely so numerous as our electronic ones. Real friends neither
brag about their number nor boast of their political or ideological
inclinations nor ruthlessly exclude those with whom they might potentially disagree!
Neither do they post only highly idealized or photo-shopped versions of
themselves solely for other so-called friends or groupies to admire!
It is actually rare for authentic friends to complain publically to the unfriendly world of sleeplessness or send out detailed reports of intimate toilet habits to be shared with a host of so-called friends and many other unsuspecting passersby. If the tin-alley wordsmith once suggested of friendship that “it’s the perfect blend-ship,” there seems less and less to blend, so little longing for harmony. Gibran, after all, said, “Let there be spaces in your togetherness.” But, in our days, we seek uniformity of thinking and conformity of doing from our erstwhile friends.
It is actually rare for authentic friends to complain publically to the unfriendly world of sleeplessness or send out detailed reports of intimate toilet habits to be shared with a host of so-called friends and many other unsuspecting passersby. If the tin-alley wordsmith once suggested of friendship that “it’s the perfect blend-ship,” there seems less and less to blend, so little longing for harmony. Gibran, after all, said, “Let there be spaces in your togetherness.” But, in our days, we seek uniformity of thinking and conformity of doing from our erstwhile friends.
What thinkest thou? In our speech and written communication,
can we be no more precise and selective than this? Can we not observe some
boundaries? Can we forego some less important things, in order to experience
genuine communication with others? Can we, at least, think as much as we
type? When our words cannot be more properly managed, what hope is there for
our ways?