Self check-out

The Ichabodian figure searched the mirror for positives. It grimaced, not too noticeably it hoped, and ran its fingers through thinning hair flattened from a rakish longshoreman’s toque–I still think my toque is rakish. Then I got my coffee and sat down.

Starbucks on 101 St: I’m now comfortably slouched in an arm chair. Above and behind me hangs the mirror, big as a kitchen window. The coffee line is at an mousemirrorangle to the mirror. And in a very short time I realize I’m deep into a study in self-consciousness.

To a woman, to a man, we check ourselves out. But there are degrees and techniques of self-checking.

There’s the conservative once over–things are expected to be in place. There’s the quizzical once over–is everything’s in place? There’s the mid-range sweep, casual, comfortable, I know everything’s in place.

There’s the embarrassed glimpse, with the oh geez I’m appalling flush. There’s the long gaze, bordering on narcissistic absorption. This one came with a kind of subtle 360–an I’m-so-hot-in-tight-black-things pirouette.

There’s the unsure repeater–yep I’m okay, oh crap, no I’m not, look at my waist. And there’s the related glinter–quick glances when it’s safe. Several ‘glints’ are needed to accomplish the check-out.

There’s the over the shoulder peek, fine, but there’s also–and this while in conversation–the over someone else’s shoulder self-examination. Strictly bad form.

There’s the determined–I’m not going to check myself out because it’s so obvious everybody is checking themselves out and I’m not going to be as unabashedly vain as everybody else. One lady made it through the entire line like this, when, some nefarious power spun her head around like Linda Blair and she caught her anguished visage in the glass just before she exited. Better to have been obvious.

Which brings me to the ruse. The, nobody will spot my self-consciousness because I’m going to be so obvious, be as comfortable as I am in my own bathroom, examine my suit, my dress, my makeup, my teeth. But people like the "ruses" because just maybe they don’t care, and because of their seeming lack of self-consciousness they make self-checking okay for everybody.

But then there was the middle-age guy in blue nylon jacket and baseball cap, oblivious to the mirror. He didn’t check himself once. The mirror held no power over him. It was neither friend nor tempter nor fiendish speculum. He just made his way through the line making conversation. What’s his story?

So, what’s your technique?

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Yes to development – No to escalation

If you’re a reluctant "petition signer" only because you wonder about the effectiveness of online petitions, here’s one that might carry added weight. Why?  It’s sponsored by Sojourners, a magazine started by social justice and peace advocate Jim Wallis. And Wallis is a friend, even something of a mentor, to the US president.Wallis

This link will take you to a petition asking Barack Obama to support economic development, not military escalation, in Afghanistan. Instead of more troops, it asks the President to…

erect schools for young women, strengthen civil society institutions, promote traditional justice mechanisms that encourage the rule of law, clean up old weapons and landmines, foster local agricultural projects, and make similar efforts.

Providing a better life for the people will provide greater stability than sending additional military forces.

Running the numbers – an American self-portrait

I was pointed to the art of Chris Jordan by a friend, currently doing her eco-part by living in a van in Hawaii, only to return to live in a van when the Lotus-land temperatures are temperate.

Anyway, Running the Numbers takes a run at contemporary American culture, turning statistics into startling images not easily forgotten. And that of course–for us statistically uncomprehending–is the point.

Each image portrays a specific quantity of something: fifteen million sheets of office paper (five minutes of paper use); 106,000 aluminum cans (thirty seconds of can consumption) and so on.

Visually astonishing and socially activating–here’s an artist you’ll want to keep track of, because as a reader of growmercy, I know you care about our earth.

cellphones

As Chris Jordan explains,

My hope is that images representing these quantities might have a different effect than the raw numbers alone… Statistics can feel abstract and anesthetizing, making it difficult to connect with and make meaning of 3.6 million SUV sales in one year, for example, or 2.3 million Americans in prison, or 32,000 breast augmentation surgeries in the U.S. every month.