Archive for September, 2011

Memory: Did It All Really Happen?

Memory: Did It All Really Happen?

agenda Memory: Did It All Really Happen?

Can you remember exactly what happened?

It’s not that I have forgotten about my blog now that I’m not on a contract; quite the contrary really. I’ve given quite some thought as to what I would to say on certain topics, but haven’t had the time what with working the usual forty hours a week, and scrounging up the few free hours I have for other projects. Swap out the forty hour work week for a full-time school schedule, which happens to immediately coincide with New York Fashion Week, and you are granted a recipe for a lack of posting.

Before last week, I had spent my time imagining how my meeting with the Head Honcho, the Psychiatrist, and Quality Management would follow suit. Had I not opted for trip across the border for the long weekend, then my mind would not have to conjure up imaginative scenarios. In any case, in playing this “waiting game,” if you will, I began to question the idea of memory.

Over the past year, it comes as no surprise to some that my mind has been constantly reconstructing every event and moment to as fine a point of accuracy as I could manage. In other words, I’ve been doing my best to preserve my memories, not wanting to forget or to corrupt them in any manner. Each minute detail was something that I would be able to recall – exact phrasing, decor, and other minute details.

I suppose, in part, that’s why I began telling this story; not only to offer the idea that being candid about experiences is something that we should claim and not hide, but also to properly archive it all. Even though I felt my memory to be correct, I wanted to not have to cling to every bit of it, while filing my report. At a certain point, it almost seemed to me as though it was necessary to be recall every fact from my perspective otherwise I would be discredited or not have a premise for complaint.

As I’ve done before, in expelling this truth and these feelings, it seems as though that I let go of my grip on these memories rather loosely. Subsequently, these memories are no longer as close to me as they once were. In fact, there seems to be this elongated distance between myself and the events, as though they happened much farther ago than they did. And that, too, becomes problematic as I awaited our meeting date. I felt estranged from what I had said, and in some moments, I found myself wondering if it was all real. But in reading through my records and my own entries, I realize that it all did happen.

The difficulty in recognizing this truth is the fact that at this point, I am no longer fixated with that particular time frame of my past. Perhaps it was in this transition between having a watchful eye in preserving each minute detail, followed by the detailed report filed that posed a problem. The shock lay in my inability to recognize my own memory in a different context; in filing my report and arching the events on my blog, I no longer had a need to keep them in the forefront of my mind. Instead, they’ve been relegated to the background, amongst other things of that time period, and it is that correctly placed chronological figure that I cannot recognize, especially so soon after.

Following this post, I’ll discuss what has come out of my report in terms of what changes have been made to the counseling/psychiatric program for employees, students, and interns at NYU.

Image courtesy of sxc.hu

September 16, 2011
Trivializing or Candidly Funny?

Trivializing or Candidly Funny?

nounou davines conditioner Trivializing or Candidly Funny?

The feature of one of Cat Marnell's articles - hair conditioner

When an article on how a two-week stint in the mental ward resulted in nothing but better hair landed on my computer screen, I almost felt compelled to immediately write a response entry. But I wasn’t quite sure what it was that I wanted to say – did I want to tear it apart or compliment the author, Cat Marnell? It’s a mixed bag of feelings; on one hand there is the appreciation in being able to confront a “heavy” topic without focusing too much on the miserable experience itself, and on the other, there is a certain trivialization in the matter, what with a second post reinforcing the point, that focuses on the promotion of beauty products, so as to fulfill some kind of criteria for the online magazine.

Admittedly, I’ll often tell friends in a joking manner about the “interesting” bunch that I met during my ten-hour stint at the ward. And while it may seem similar in terms of tone to Marnell’s story, I find it to be completely different. From her writing, it almost seems as though that the entry encircles the product, as opposed to the product being a punchline to her story. In other words, the product is the main focus, and the “heavy” material simply supports its placement as a means of detracting from promotion and advertising.

For those that contend my point by saying that product placement can be inadvertently done, I point those readers to the entry on STREEKERS, in which Marnell discusses the product for a lengthy half of her entry. She could simply have ended at the name of the product, but instead continues on to describe to us the trend and price point – completely unnecessary if the intention was to convey to the reader a humourous story.

It’s a shame, really. The earnest and candid voice that Marnell seems to possess can be used to advocate so much more than hair products. I commend her for even considering bringing up the subject of these experiences. Subsequently, I would follow the commendation with an admonition, but in this circumstance, can I? There has been conversation sparked in the comments section, with readers recalling and expressing their own stories. But even with that goal of creating gab achieved, the features, as a whole, are a wasted opportunity – to have the chance to speak so frankly with such a strong following and engagement ready to advocate and converse, but instead opt to sideline the serious and highlight what could otherwise be deemed a “paid editorial” (even if it weren’t, it certainly feels like one).

Image courtesy of XOJane.com

September 5, 2011