Wednesday, 28 May 2014
Monday, 26 May 2014
Saturday, 24 May 2014
Haiku pair
Not deserving
this metal fence
a dandelion
Not deserving
this field of poppies
a metal fence
Labels:
haiku
Tuesday, 20 May 2014
Monday, 19 May 2014
The Kizunas (part 4)
A mixture of the faddish and
the genuine, but whose fault was it? The name Kizuna was known all over the
nation and their music was making people feel good. But when the side that
takes over as fashion tips the scales, then the momentum slows down and things
are taken for granted or forgotten; or worse still, become fossilized
platitudes. And there was always the possibility that this could happen to The
Kizunas.
As if a harbinger of what was
to come, or indeed what was actually happening, a trivial incident occurred at
a performance in the capital. Just as they had finished their last song, a
sequin from Ms. Kizuna’s right sleeve broke its thread and flickered down to
the floor of the stage. It happened in an instant and only the people in the
very first row could have noticed it, if at all. But to the Kizunas it was like
a cast iron plate thudding into the wooden boards beneath their feet. And as
they came off, they realized that the loud applause that always accompanied
their exit to the wings was a subdued patter. They could hear their footsteps
padding off into the dressing room; they had never before heard the rustle of
their clothes as they were going off.
Is this what Zeami meant by opprobrium from the masses? Were these
the first stages of losing the Flower?
The Kizunas flopped down into their chairs. They were in decline; people didn’t
care about them that much any more. What had changed? Why were they not
considered to be as necessary as before? Was it inevitable that a good thing
cannot last forever? Yes, the climate of the times had changed; people had
changed; feelings, emotions, and lifestyles had been re-prioritized to suit
values recognized and reinforced, even coerced, by society as it now was. The
Kizunas were slowly being forgotten, their fame and meaning tapering to a
hardly discernible footnote in the back of people’s minds.
Labels:
satire,
social comment
Monday, 12 May 2014
Saturday, 10 May 2014
Person not people
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Wednesday, 7 May 2014
Monday, 5 May 2014
The Kizunas (part 3)
Their
name appeared everywhere. In the neon signs announcing their next appearance,
on the helmets of baseball players, as tattoos on the arms of young men and the
ankles of young women. The whole nation felt good. It was as if some magic dust
had been sprinkled over the land by the songs of The Kizunas – a coating of
grace and enlightenment. People began to reassess their lives, heeding the
songs’ messages, which reminded them of the important things in life, as well
as its brevity and impermanence. Family members who had not met up for years
began to make efforts to renew contacts with their kin; there was forgiveness
for the absentees and the runaways, the divorcees and the lost contacts. Nobody
could quite explain how such a feeling, such a mentality, had suddenly gripped
the nation. That the Kizunas had triggered such emotions with their music was
in no doubt, but how it had happened at this precise time and to this extent
was still under debate. A flash in the pan? A short-lived fad? Or a permanent
change in the mindset? A famous psychologist explained as follows:
This is a
good example of what is known in our field as the Schilstrom-Richtblufter
Effect. There is what we call an intra-psychosertive desire within people to
manifest a behaviour, feeling, or habit, which needs an extra-psychoadsertive
contrareflexive stimulus to release a series of emotions acting as pre-parietal
hippocampial reflex agents. In other words, if a behaviour is suggested to you
as being desirable, it will be readily embraced and even enhanced further if
the initial desire, no matter how deeply buried or concealed, is present. The
Kizunas are spreading a message that a lot of people have found that they need.
It’s nothing new; it was always there.It just needed an exogenous impetus to
generate an endogenous reaction. And it’s a common phenomenon, with many
examples existing in every culture. One famous equivalent could be the Flower
Power movement at the end of the 1960s, and it is likely that the impact of The
Kizunas will last for about the same length of time. It does not necessarily
mean that the pervasive feeling or trend will disappear, but there is always a
thinning out, a decline, or a transformation to mask the original phenomenon,
even though it could actually continue for a long time, albeit in a less
conspicuous form.
Meanwhile, The Kizunas were still flying high.
Labels:
satire,
social comment
Friday, 2 May 2014
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