So done with 2021... |
Even though it's January 1st, it sounds frivolous to offer the standard "happy new
year" greeting. In light of what's going on, it seems
trite... or tone deaf. Or somehow lacking appreciation of a new and very
different reality.
I largely refrained from using it last year because I understood how
challenging our times would be, coming off the unprecedented days of 2020.
Little did I know when I began using the phrase, "Better New Year to You"
how much that would also ring hollow as the year wore on. Let me look back
for a moment on what 2021 has been.
Frustrating. Maddening. Exhausting.
This past year — which I had formed in a hopeful frame only to be
better
than the previous — did not fulfill its potential. Not only that,
parts of it were distinctly nasty in a way that made me wonder about
humanity. Which leads me to confess that I have not been as jaded
about the direction in which society is heading as I have been during
most of 2021.
I don't have high expectations of 2022, but will always believe that things can be better.
NOTE: If you believe that the first day of January should only be reserved for unbridled celebration or if you don't care
to read an off-topic post — nothin' about sewing here — you can
safely skip today's entry.
2021 made me more judgmental about human beings than I ever thought
possible. On a near daily basis, I felt overwhelmed by inane idiocy
from every direction.
Seemingly ordinary folks felt the need to demonstrate against
seemingly small inconveniences in 2021. All in the name of "freedoms"
and "rights". The same vaccines that couldn't be made available
quickly enough for us in late 2020 were soon viewed by some as part of
a conspiracy to inject tracking devices into our bodies. Actual, livid
hate spewed forth as a result of being asked by our governments to
wear masks. Self proclaimed students of history — who have had the
privilege of being born and raised in the relative comfort of the
western world — thought it appropriate to compare local health
restrictions and vaccine mandates to the atrocities committed by past
fascist and genocidal regimes.
Politicians, in an effort just to keep their jobs, were running around
like proverbial emperors without clothes — literally, in the case of
one former Canadian MP — hoping that we're all stupid enough to
believe anything... and unfortunately galvanizing those who are.
We have reached a point where virtually any opinion can be floated out
and accepted as fact by fringe elements. Meanwhile, the rest of us are
being asked to prove that the earth is round... or that the pandemic
is not a hoax.
And I'm not letting the "far left" off the hook when it comes to
sowing idiocy. The continued attempts to placate relatively trivial
matters with political correctness is exhausting. The more we try to
convince people that we are all equal, the more pushback we get, since
it is virtually impossible to promote inclusiveness without first
drawing attention to the differences among us. Ironic, isn't it?
Grammar and language are also taking a hit from political correctness.
First there was the idea that people can claim their own pronouns (as
if they could somehow pin them on their chests), with the plural
"they" now being acceptable when referring to a singular person. What
I find ridiculous about this trend is that it has prompted folks who
are clearly not gender fluid to participate on social media.
I'm talking about married men and women in traditional families who
have no likelihood of ever being mistaken for the opposite sex,
finding it necessary to inform on their Twitter accounts that
they are to be referred to as he/him or she/her.
Sheesh.
Then just last month, I came across an article listing terms that we
should consider not using, among them "blind spot", "tone deaf" and
"first world problem". (I've actually used two of those in this very
post and I'm not going to apologize for doing so.) The gist of the the
article was that we must take care, because people who are —
blind? deaf? living in second and third world countries? — may
take offence.
(◔_◔)
With extremes that seem so nonsensical on one side and dangerous on
the other, it's no wonder that people are becoming more and more
divided.
Which brings us to...
The Year That Proved Social Media is Destroying Society
I learned of one good thing that Facebook did in 2021. A
seventy-some year old divorced man reconnected with a former colleague
who just happened to have been recently widowed. They are now enjoying
a second chance at love. However, I am pretty sure that
Facebook reconnections have also broken up many a marriage, so
that negates that bit of positivity.
If you've been a regular reader here, you may know of my
stance regarding social media. Since I first posted my opinion of it back in 2017, my views have
only strengthened against it. In 2021, it was impossible to ignore the
deluge of misinformation that was being spread via social media about
the pandemic, about vaccines, about COVID cures... the list goes on
and on. The Surgeon General of the United States actually stated back
in July that online misinformation is a "serious threat to public
health".
Unfortunately, the only urgency Mr. Zuckerberg seems to have about
fixing the problem is to change the name of his company.
Forgive me my rants... |
Most of what I described in the first part of this post is actually a
direct result of social media. The deep fissures that have made their
way across society would not have occurred without people having the
(easy) ability to make outrageous claims — and then double and triple
down on them — via social media platforms. It's led to "unity by rage"
and the formation of alliances based on things that we are
against, rather than things that we support.
The most troublesome byproduct of the age of misinformation is that
we no longer value traditional competence. Instead, we give
credence to "experts" who have gained prominence strictly due to
their being the loudest voices online. Meanwhile, individuals who
are educated and qualified in their expertise are just as likely to
be ridiculed for their input as to be thanked and appreciated for
their knowledge. This phenomenon is beyond comprehension. It informs
me that humanity is circling a big drain, which makes me concerned
for our collective futures.
There are small glimmers of hope. I recently read a tweet from
someone who said that he'd rather give his kids
Jack Daniels and weed than give them Instagram. More of us need to think along those lines. (Although you're free
to play with the JD and weed part. ⊂(◉‿◉)つ )
A lot of what social media is, is an addiction that's bad for us,
particularly when it creates instant outrage and amps up negativity.
It's like booze to an alcoholic. Treat it as such and we'll all be
that much healthier for it.
The Year That Delivered Climate Change to Our Front Doors
On December 1, this was the radar graphic that greeted folks in the
southern part of BC, my provincial neighbour to the west and a place
I consider my second home.
image courtesy of Global BC... |
It was the third atmospheric river to hammer them in the span
of two weeks. Can you imagine a literal river falling from the sky?
While it was an established meteorological term, I had never heard
it used before. To see the devastation that resulted from
three such systems in a row made my heart hurt. (California
was also hit by at least one this past month.)
The first one had already produced catastrophic results, flooding
farms and towns and leaving a major highway with damage that will
take months to bring back to full capacity. Secondary roadways were
washed out and impassable, stalling an already tenuous supply chain.
Some areas of the province were cut off from the rest of Canada for
days. Grocery store shelves emptied in a way that topped even the
early periods of the pandemic.
This is the same province that experienced the worst part of a
heat dome
— another crazy meteorological term — last June, leading to a small
village going up in flames days after setting a new record high
temperature of 49.6 degrees Celsius. Continued heat and dryness then
triggered the wildfires that burned through the province for most of
the summer. (Over the past ten days, some of those same areas have
now experienced unprecedented cold temperatures... it doesn't want to end.)
The series of winter tornados that tore through the US three weeks
ago — with one staying on the ground for hours, grinding through
more than two hundred destructive miles — was yet another example of
weather gone mad. A couple of days ago, about six hundred homes
burned up in Colorado from fires driven by lack of moisture and
hurricane force winds.
It made me think that for decades, we've been told that climate
change will be a slow, gradual process before it becomes a major
problem that can no longer be addressed. What if the past several
decades have
been that slow gradual process and we're now hitting the next
phase? If we are in fact already past the beginning of a new normal,
we need to do more — and do better — for future generations.
The Year I Realized How Shallow Most First World Problems Are
I was in a panic exactly two months ago, thinking that supply chain disruptions would make it impossible for me to find a "day timer" for 2022. I checked my neighbourhood Dollarama first and could not find the version that I was looking for. A few days later I was fortunate enough to nab one of eight remaining at the Dollarama at the mall.
When I got home, I took a moment to consider how frazzled I felt about
something as inconsequential as possibly not having a glorified
calendar.
While we are being asked to reconsider using the term "first world
problem", I maintain that many of the worries consuming the minds of
people in western society are insignificant compared to those faced by
people who might live "elsewhere".
image courtesy of Google Dictionary... |
It's why I'm appalled by those who have made their fight against
pandemic restrictions a field to die on, equating their inconvenienced
lives to the worst periods in human history. The people making these
comparisons have no clue what it means to live in hiding from
officials who will kill them on sight, to have no idea where
tomorrow's meal is going to come from, to wonder if the next roar
overhead is going to drop a bomb that will take out their entire
family, or to decide that crossing deadly seas on an inflatable raft
is better than staying in their own native country.
To be clear: I don't have any idea what it feels like to be in
those situations. (I thank all the forces in the universe that I don't.) But I also don't pop up on the evening news whining about how hard
it is to get home from my annual tropical vacation as a result of
changing COVID protocols. I don't go on TV to sue an event planner for
providing the wrong colour table cloths. And I certainly don't poison
the minds of small children by having them carry conspiracy theory
signs while shouting obscenities at meaningless freedom rallies. My
goodness!
I lament the increasing loss of empathy in our society. The inability
to walk in the shoes of a fellow human being is a major problem. The
lack of concern for the well-being of others outside of our own crew
is a huge issue. The resulting self-centeredness is not a show of
strength; it weakens all of mankind.
If you're the sort who makes new year's resolutions, consider adding
one to your list. As people, as communities, as countries, as a planet... can we strive to be less offended by inconsequential things that
shouldn't bother us and be more willing to address the crucial things that should bother us?
If you've actually read this far, I thank you; I appreciate you, and
please know that I do wish you all the best in 2022. I also
promise to be focused on sewing next week.
Until then...
My dear Rochelle, I have followed your blog for years and continue to enjoy your Saturday adventures even before getting out of bed. Today is no different! I enjoy you, your creativeness, your inventions, your viewpoints on sewing and the world. I enjoy everything about you because I have come to know you, your ups and downs are all part of you… those cows… not my fav, but so enjoyable because your passion for them was real! And here’s my point… it is passion that you have talked about today… the passions of others and yours… it’s actually the passion that draws you to even watch the news! That is what you can celebrate! Yes, just think about it, passion is the element that drives greatness and the amount of passion you have described is heartwarming to me! Not because of the ‘Direction’ it’s headed, but just because it’s so abundant and alive and moving the world… sooo it is up to you, now, to practice your faith and know that the divine force that has created all this is directing the dance, the passions, and the outcome! Almira
ReplyDeleteYes! Girl, I appreciate your words and the time it took you to state these ideas in such a proficient way. I could be your VP, your back-up, your stand-in, for any soapbox you take on. (I just can't say it all as well, so I'd need your notes.) The world is in such a backward spin, but I still do all I can to make it better, no matter how small my actions. We can each make steps to a brighter future by showing kindness and love. On that note, I wish you a Better New Year, my friend!
ReplyDeleteWow! Thank you for putting my thoughts into words in a better way than I ever could! I couldn’t agree with you more. May your new year be blessed with seeing more of the good things that give you joy!
ReplyDeleteAnd may I also wish you good health, strength and resilience to cope with our ongoing challenges, because they are not going to go away any time soon. On the other hand, you — and everyone else today — have given me greater hope for 2022!
ReplyDeleteThis is the most important, amazing article I have read in years, in a world so disrupted and in need of some kind of peace to show love and kindness again to mankind. I praise you highly Rochelle, not only for your sewing but your humble human side. God Bless and stay safe-
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to be positive about our world - for exactly the reasons you've described. Here's hoping things start to look up this year, although I'm doubtful.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your lofty words of praise that I may or may not deserve. If we can all make an effort to turn the tide by doing small things, let's gather our troops and make it work!
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