Monday 30 May 2022

Pistis reclaims 'as if...' (weekending May 28th 2022)

 

‽istis reclaims: ‘as if…’ (weekending May 28th 2022)

This week:

·        when a Prime Minister might have resigned (as if…);

·        when a President might have entered into peace talks (as if…);

·        when the profits of energy companies and the dividends of shareholders and the owners of the means of producing that energy may have been hit with a massive windfall tax by a Conservative Chancellor (as if…);

·        when BBC Radio 4’s programme ‘Start the Week’[i] encouraged us to consider that co-operation within and between organisms, creatures and animals (and perhaps even us) may be more the norm than previously thought,

‽istis ponders ‘as if…’

This week’s main ‘as if’ though might be not so much the exclamatory tone of a realist/pessimist/sceptic (“As if!!!”), but more perhaps the ‘as if’ of someone imagining feeling as if they were another, imagining thinking as if they were another, imagining behaving as if they were another – living in the light of all that imagining, all that as if

With apologies then, for it’s more ponderings on the empathy/sympathetic imagination theme that cropped up last week and has made an appearance in other previous blog entries….

·        What if party-goers (and those who may have let them party or turned an eye) had, just for a moment, tried to think and feel as if they were the Queen on the evening before Prince Philip’s funeral and then behave accordingly; as if they were the person standing in the rain, in a flower bed to get near the window of a care home to try and explain yet again why they could not come inside and hold a hand

·        What if policy-making was undertaken as if ‘nothing about us, without us’ (that’s "Nihil de nobis, sine nobis" for all you types who perhaps like to throw in a Latin phrase to quite possibly prove to their parents and peers that the expensive education was not wasted and just how clever they must be…) was the over-riding principle – including the views and wishes and feelings of the excluded and discriminated against, those disabled by society and the organisation and arrangements of society‽ What if the idea of a Rawlsian ‘space’ where we did not know where or how (personally, socially or geographically) we individually would turn out to be living, or who we individually would turn out to be - was practice not just theory

·        What if foreign policy was formed and informed by Presidents and generals thinking as if it were their own cities and towns and schools and hospitals and shops and homes that were being bombed, as if it was their grandparents and parents and partners and children (or even themselves) who were being killed or raped, or who were hiding terrified, or who were fleeing; or who were left lying dead, unburied in the streets of their home town; or who were left scarred or traumatised…‽

What if we could just for a moment imagine living as if the driving survival imperative was indeed for the ‘fittest’ to thrive and pass on their genes - but that ‘the fittest’ was defined as that which/who can best meld and co-operate; was the organism that thrives in symbiotic co-existence rather than ‘fight to the death’ dominance…  was the person/persons who could see themselves as part of a greater whole and could help build, maintain and promote a place where my wellbeing is utterly and inextricably linked with your wellbeing‽ 

Perhaps, possibly, maybe just consider and try to imagine how different you and I might then find each other to be, and how different we might then find the world to be, the world that we had all created together…

As if, eh‽

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  

 

[i] https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0017k6s Thank you Adam Rutherford, Frans de Waal, Seirian Sumner and Nichola Raihani


Saturday 21 May 2022

Pistis ponders becoming inured (weekending May 21st 2022)

 

‽istis ponders becoming inured (weekending May 21st 2022)

This week ‽istis ponders and is very troubled by what may be the risk of a process of becoming inured as

‽ the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), as of May 19 2022, verified in relation to Russia's military attack on Ukraine

·        a total of 3,838 civilian deaths during.

·        256 were children.

·        4,351 people were reported to have been injured. However, OHCHR specified that the real numbers could be higher.[i]

‽ the numbers of people ‘internally displaced’ in Ukraine, many leaving their homes with little more than what they can carry, reportedly exceeds 8 million…[ii]

‽ images of pallbearers being kicked and beaten and of mourners for a journalist being stunned with grenades – perhaps fade[iii]

‽ the specific number of inflatable boats attempting to cross the Channel with people seeking safety and sanctuary and maybe just a chance, is difficult to recall[iv]

‽ as warnings of climate crisis are perhaps assuaged by talk of ‘techno-fixes’[v]

‽ as the daily experiences of domestic violence, abuse and coercive control for millions are possibly hidden behind what seems like a soap opera trial[vi]

‽ as an appalling report of a child who had their life literally ‘shaken out’[vii] maybe brings the daily reality of abuse for some children and young people momentarily into the public consciousness

…and on, and on – wherever you are, whichever country or continent; whatever acute crisis or chronic, desperate and distressing situation you may have thought about, or heard of, or read about, or experienced very, very directly......…‽

So ‽istis seeks out a definition: anure - ‘to accustom, to accept something undesirable’[viii]; ‘hardened by frequent exposure, especially to something bad’, ‘to accustom to hardship, difficulty, pain, etc.; toughen or harden; habituate’[ix]. Or, perhaps in some contrast, several definitions in law: to have a particular effect or result; a term used to indicate to whose benefit or advantage the particular action or process has been done for…[x]

And perhaps, possibly, maybe in these two areas of definition there could be a clue…‽ 

The effect of becoming inured, becoming hardened, accustomed, habituated - may be an unconscious/subconscious/innate survival mechanism, a way of coping after an exposure to too much reality, too much pain, too much that may disturb and distress? It may bring a benefit for me, limiting distress to ‘me and mine’ rather than an overwhelming ‘you and yours’?

 Yet, if somehow we could bear to recall, bear to remember, bear to retain, bear to think and feel what it might be like; if we could bear to live with a little more unfettered ‘sympathetic imagination’[xi], well just consider how different the world could be…

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  

 



[iv] This data covers the 24-hour period 00:00 to 23:59 19 May 2022.

·         Number of migrants detected in small boats: 106

·         Number of boats detected: 3

·         The Ministry of Defence does not believe that any migrants arrived on their own terms in a small boat from the English Channel.

https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/migrants-detected-crossing-the-english-channel-in-small-boats

[vi] For example: an estimated 1.6 million women aged 16 to 74 years experienced domestic abuse in the last year https://www.womensaid.org.uk/information-support/what-is-domestic-abuse/how-common-is-domestic-abuse/ & https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-61527595

[x] https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/inure

 [xi] ‘By the imagination we place ourselves in his situation, we conceive ourselves enduring all the same torments, we enter as it were into his body, and become in some measure the same person with him, and thence form some idea of his sensations, and even feel something which, though weaker in degree, is not altogether unlike them.’ Theory of Moral Sentiments Adam Smith. See: https://www.adamsmithworks.org/speakings/sympathy-fellow-feeling-and-the-imagination, for example.


Wednesday 11 May 2022

Pistis reclaims good fortune (weekending May 14th 2022)

 

‽istis reclaims good fortune (weekending May 14th 2022)

In a couple of weeks when

‽ someone in the UK has come forward with the EuroMillions winning lottery ticket to claim a new record £184million[i]

‽ a colleague has apparently won a ‘beast’ of a Triumph motorbike for less than £10 of raffle tickets

‽istis has chanced upon an episode of BBC Radio 4’s Start the Week programme considering ‘Curiosity, Ingenuity and Experimentation’[ii]

‽istis ponders good fortune… and finds (guided by carefully crafted algorithms) some relevant attributed quotations[iii]:

·        ‘Oh, but you must travel through those woods again and again... said a shadow at the window... and you must be lucky to avoid the wolf every time... But the wolf... the wolf only needs enough luck to find you once.’  Emily Carroll.

·        ‘Everything in life is luck.’ Donald Trump.

·        ‘People always call it luck when you’ve acted more sensibly than they have.’ Anne Tyler.

·        ‘Luck affects everything; let your hook always be cast; in the stream where you least expect it, there will be a fish.’ Ovid.

·        ‘Luck has a way of evaporating when you lean on it.’ Brandon Mull.

·        ‘Diligence is the mother of good luck.’ Benjamin Franklin.

Several quotations suggest that perhaps there may be something more than random chance going on: ‘Luck is a dividend of sweat. The more you sweat, the luckier you get.’ Ray Kroc.

And ‽istis recalls the ‘lucky’ gold winning ‘last man standing’ 2002 Winter Olympic speedskater, Steven Bradbury, safe in last place when all those in front crashed out. Bradbury is quoted as saying:  "I'll accept this gold medal. But not for the 90 seconds of the race - I'm going to take it for the 14 years of hard work." And later, it appears that Bradbury was in the right place, at the right time and was able to help save the lives of four very ‘lucky’ young people in rough Queensland surf[iv]

 In the ‘Start the Week’ broadcast there was talk of serendipity, the importance of ‘continuous endeavour’ and a reference to what may be a ‘general truth’[v] in an aphorism attributed to Louis Pasteur: ‘Fortune favours the prepared mind.’ Even the EuroMillions winner heeded the marketing advice: ‘Be in it to win it’ , believed that 'It could be you!'and bought a ticket… knowing the odds or otherwise. Years of risk assessments and reviews of serious incidents have perhaps left us with a sense of caution for ‘low probability events sometimes happen’ [vi]

 So where does this leave our ponderings and wonderings this week‽

  • Perhaps, possibly maybe we might attribute just a little bit more to the endeavour of those who appear lucky?
  • But what if the circumstances that support anyone’s capacity to ‘endeavour’, that lead to a mind prepared, are also extraordinarily complex and ‘chancy’?  
  • That perhaps whether we are apparently ‘winners’ or ‘losers’, we may all be ‘hoping against hope’[vii] in a world where so much is possibly beyond our control?
  • That a worthwhile endeavour for us all may be one where we seek to create the conditions of good fortune, build a ‘right place’ and a ‘right time’ for everyone, as perhaps luckily we are all ‘in it’ together.  

© Pistis                                                                                                                    

NB: further reflections and comments linked to this week’s theme and past blog entries to be found on Twitter: replies, retweets (which don’t necessarily indicate approval, sometimes the very opposite!) and ‘likes’: @Pistis_wonders. ‘Follows’ and respectful comment and dialogue welcome...  

 



[iii] https://kidadl.com/quotes/top-luck-quotes-to-bring-some-magic-into-your-life And finding this interesting website has seemed a little bit ‘chancy’: ‘The Kidadl Solution

Kidadl was founded as the digital home of family edutainment, helping parents educate and entertain their kids with trusted, personalized, curated content designed for families the world over.’

[iv] Interestingly Steven Bradbury went on to save four very lucky young people from drowning in a dramatic rescue in wild surf https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10587673/Australias-Olympic-hero-Steven-Bradbury-saved-four-lives-Sunshine-Coast.html Right place, right time; again!


‽istis ponders volunteering, expertise and tapping (weekending April 27th 2024)

  ‽istis ponders volunteering, expertise and knowing where and how to tap (weekending April 27 th  2024) Various themes this weekending; m...