Monday, March 2, 2009

"Everything's amazing and nobody's happy"

While discussing Wittgenstein, De Certeau writes, “He, too, possessed 'fragments of a new way of thinking and feeling' and saw 'the spectacle of novelty, at first so intense,' dissolve 'into the multiplication of details'" (13). This week, a friend sent me this link on Youtube where Louis C.K., a comedian on Conan O'Brien, describes this novelty in our society.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yk7nKjr9Keo

I do think we live in a great age, and people are not grateful or amazed for what they have. We don't have to hunt for our own food anymore or sew our own clothes, and we have so many luxuries that make life easier. So much easier. For example, I used to knead bread on my kitchen table until my husband bought me a Kitchen Aid a couple of years ago. Wow! What an improvement. It makes my life so much easier, but I am still unsatisfied. I wish he could have bought me the more powerful Kitchen Aid with a larger bowl so that I can make bigger batches of bread or cookies. I’m ungrateful. I forget how much time it used to take me to knead the dough for just two loaves of bread. Now I just throw the ingredients in the bowl and leave to do something else, checking it occasionally. It's human nature to look for what's bigger and better.

Another example of this idea of novelty happened at our store this week. (We own a Radio Shack franchise and full-line music store.) A young man in town for a gig came into the store and saw the Iceman Ibanez guitar that we just got in. This young man had been in the store for about 10 minutes and wanted it because of its unique shape and how well it played. He called his bank to try to raise his credit because he wanted it. My husband knew it was only an impulse buy. The novelty of having that shiny new guitar was so "intense," and it probably would have "dissolved" after a few days.

-Colleen Murphy

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