Friday 28 December 2012

It's what's inside that counts

Save the wrapping paper, save the world

Climate is changing. Resources are not inexhaustible. There will be generations after ours, and we have to leave them an inhabitable earth.

We therefore reuse the wrapping paper of our Christmas presents. The presents are opened carefully using a pair of scissors in order not to tear the paper. The paper is then solemnly folded and carefully and put in bags (mentally marked “good conscience”) and stored for reuse the following year.

 We are a large family and for Christmas we were 16 people. The average taking must have been around 15 presents for everyone. Every present is opened carefully, passed around to be admired and added to the receivers’ stack of presents. Many of them will be probably be put aside never to be looked at again.

My brother-in-law apparently was getting a bit upset with the slow progress, the prospect of the exercise having to be adjourned in order to be continued the following day – which seems to have become our private Christmas tradition - and the general overabundance of socks (after all you only have two feet).

He was in such a hurry to get on with the unpacking that he tore the paper. I looked at him disapprovingly.

- Oh! Come on, he retorted.

- This is like flying supersonic from Europe to New York to go out for an evening meal. Walking two blocks from the hotel to the restaurant to save fuel, and then look deridingly at people arriving from their New York home in a taxi.

Secretly I tend to agree with him. The less wrapping paper that is used again, the better for the world. That is, if new wrapping paper is not used instead.

 

Friday 21 December 2012

Four Vegetarians and a Muslim for Xmas

It has been confirmed. The guest list for Christmas includes four vegetarians and a Muslim. The family is growing. The young ones have chosen their own ways of life, and some have found their partners for life outside the social circles of their parents.
 
We have all been together before. And we have had a fine time together. Our own diet has already changed over the years. Cutting back on meat - even a couple of days every week with vegetarian meals. No problem – well, no BIG problem. 
But Christmas Dinner! Traditions rule when it comes to celebrating Christmas. Roast duck or roast pork is tradition. Quorn and tofu is found nowhere in the Holiday recipes passed on by the Grannies. Pork was a predominant nutritional element in my own family’s many days of Christmas feasting. Alcoholic brewerages were by no way banned.
 
Well, anyway. Christmas should maybe not only be about eating and drinking. The table is as much the people around it as the food upon it. So let’s celebrate family and friendship. Old traditions die, new traditions are born.
 
The other night, In an absurd dream, I saw myself outside the church, waiting for people to come out after the mass. Finally my wife is there. What’s the news? I ask. “It's a boy, and his is a vegetarian”, she said.
So, COEXIST AND EAT WHAT'S ON YOUR PLATE.

Friday 14 December 2012

Men Multitasking (with eyes closed)


Life is not was it was. Especially not, if you are a male.

Our contribution to childcare, cleaning and cooking has increased tremendously with the success of the women’s liberation movement. Fair enough, the couple should share the burdens of running the household.  And, admittedly, the women still do most of the work when it comes to shopping. What would the wardrobe look like without a woman in the house? And would there be one?

But there’s another reason for the increase in our burden.  The multitude of electronic appliances. Although many of them claim to be “intuitive”, only the cell phone and the credit card machine seem to be truly intuitive in the female sense of the word. The others are the man’s domain.

Try to think of the hours spent sorting out problems with computers, satellite receivers, the setting up of television sets, installation of game consoles etc. Add to this the maintenance of cars, often two in a household, and garden machinery. And of course the bigger houses we live in now. And we have, most of us, many more consumer goods than our parents had.

But all this has come at a price. We have less free time than our dads had.

We will have to start multitasking to cope. The women claim that they do that much better than we do. Maybe if we could learn it, someday it would again be politically correct to be man, and we would be accepted as equal partners.

I have started. Today I charged a phone AND a laptop, while AT THE SAME TIME having a nap on the couch.

I can’t wait to tell my wife.

 
PS: I shouldn’t have. And we will have been in our graves many years, before we will be politically correct, I should add.

Friday 7 December 2012

Images in Words

Here is a quote from a great novel: She took out a picture of her daughter to show it to him. “No tell me what she looks like in words” he said. (From To the End of the Land, written by David Grossman).
 
How do you render in words what is depicted in lines and colours? It isn't easy, is it? Pictures don't say anything, the show something.
 
There is no exact verbalisation. A computer programme could perhaps convert a picture into other forms of data – splitting it into millions of pixels, each of them with a specific mixture of cyan, magenta and yellow. But it would not give any meaning – unless for another computer, which could recreate it as an exact copy of the original.
 
A description of a picture would be different for every person who made the attempt. It would to some degree convey the attitude and feelings of the one making the attempt. It might be a faithful, reproduction – but not an exact one.
 
Can words convey things that an image cannot? Something more than a precise mechanical representation? Something with a human touch to it?
 
And in the opposite direction. Words into images. You read a book, and in your mind you translate the words into pictures of characters, landscapes and situations. Different pictures for every reader.


I remember visiting an old castle. I looked at one of the paintings on a wall. A strange landscape and strange animals. Some big grey animals with a long peculiar nose, some spotted animals with a long neck. They looked like nothing I had seen before. I realised that it was a very old painting, probably painted on the basis of a verbal description by someone who had been in Africa.
 
If a story is made into a film, the pictures will already have been created for you. And they are the same for everyone.
 
Pictures of the Prophet Muhammad are not allowed. There must be billions of them in the minds of the believers.