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Are Facebook friends modern day penpals?

March 14, 2014 by LiskaStampCollective

Mr 11 nearly 12 asks me the other day if I knew he was a tweenager? So I got to thinking about what comes with teenagedom. Like turning 13 and being able to have his own Facebook account and the whole concept of Facebook friends. You know those people that you have never met in person but are now friends with on Facebook.  Teenagers in particular seem to have them. How do people have 5000 friends (the number at which Facebook cuts off your friends)? Why do people want to have 5000 friends? 

Why do people want to be friends with a person they have never met?

That got me thinking. I had two penpals growing up.

One in Malaysia and one in Canada.  Both girls about my age.

Two people I had never met, who lived in countries I would most likely never travel to and yet I happily shared my teenage angst and joys of daily life. with them in monthly letters.

Hmmm ….. maybe not so different to a Facebook friend.

Every month or two a letter would arrive in the post box and I would be enthralled before I even opened the letters. Their handwriting was so different to start with. Big and loopy meant Canada and very neat and pointy meant Malaysia.  Malaysia used aerograms and Canada white envelopes with a blue trim. And of course the stamps, so foreign.

These were the days before the Internet, YouTube, and Google images. My knowledge about these two countries came from the non – fiction and geography sections at our local library especially the world atlas and Encyclopedia Britannica. So especially treasured were the envelopes that included photographs. Snow from Canada and tropical greenness from Malaysia.

What did teenage girls who had never met each other and from such different worlds talk about? Honestly I have no idea. The international language of teenagers must have transcended borders to sustain a conversation that lasted years.

Then it stopped. High school was coming to an end and we all stood on the edge of that big shiny new world of adulthood and unexplored freedoms. Moving countries as I did I lost much of the ephemera of my childhood and those letters were casualties in the transition between countries and adulthood.

I wonder if their lives look anything like the dreams we wrote about.

I went Googling to see if penpals were still ‘a thing’ in this day and age. What I found is that word ‘penpal’ is still out there but to my mind it is a completely different experience to that of the pre-internet era.

Photos, profiles, multiple accounts, emails – a social media forum that felt a bit like a dating website. Truth is modern penpal world felt a little creepy to me.

Facebook friend or modern day penpal, what’s missing in both those is the hand written letter.

Writing a letter by hand takes time and reflection. The script is uniquely yours, not Arial or Cambria font. No spell check, delete button or standard font size. Perfectly imperfect.

Receiving a hand written letter that you can fold and tuck away in a special place to be treasured and re-read is a rare gift.

When last did you handwrite a letter?

Liska x

Filed Under: Random Questions Tagged With: Facebook, friendship, parents

RANDOM QUESTIONS

October 28, 2013 by LiskaStampCollective

Sunrise Sculpture by the Sea

Sunrise at Sculpture by the Sea 2013

As the sun rose along the Bondi to Bronte coastal walk on Saturday morning, my daughter and I experienced Sculpture by the Sea. It was bliss. Girl time with my daughter, the salty tang of the air, the infinite range of blues and green in the ocean and the diverse array of sculptures.

Afterwards lots of thoughts jostled in my head for space and in no specific order this is some of what came to mind.

A – Staying Present

At that time of morning most of the other people carried very large cameras or were running. Each installation was thought provoking in some way and demanded a response, big or small.  Yet half the people viewed the art through a lens (me included with my iPhone) and the other half ran straight past it.

I wonder how many of us on Saturday morning were actually present to the moment and the presence of the art.  Did we stop and feel our experience? Have we forgotten to trust our visual and perceptual memory of experience? Was the experience and memory downsized to a photo?

What’s your answer?

B – Trust yourself

Our Sculpture by the Sea Favourites

Our Sculpture by the Sea Favourites

As we looked at the diverse range of sculptures exhibited we talked about what we liked and didn’t like and at the end of our walk we decided on our favourites and posted a collage on Instagram (note to self see point A).

Our personal judging ceremony reminded me of a time when I was studying part time towards a Diploma in Colour Consulting and drawing was part of the coursework. This particular tutor had a preference for detailed complex drawings, not my style at all and it was clear that she didn’t think I was very good.

I was completely disheartened until the next time I found myself at the Art Gallery of NSW. This august institution is a repository of fine art and yet as I looked around I wondered how some of the pieces had come to be hung on the walls as I thought they were awful.

It was an ‘ah ha’ moment in my creative journey.

These artworks represented the taste and style of the different curators of the gallery and therefore were rightly diverse in style and expression. But what they all had in common was the artist’s unerring commitment to their craft. So it didn’t really matter what my tutor thought about my drawings, it was far more important how I felt about my drawings and my commitment to my creative pursuits.

A reminder to trust your inner voice and not worry too much about what other people think.

What’s your inner voice saying?

C – Perspective

Sometimes we forget that our perspective is only one view and there are others to be had.

Take ‘transformation’ the sculpture by Tom de Munk-Kerkmeer. For some reason it really resonated with me. And it made our Favourite List. Then when I was googling to find the name of artist this morning I found another image of the same artwork from a completely different perspective. The photo on the left I took and the photo on the right was on the ABC News website with no photographer attribution.

by Tom de Munk-Kerkmeer
by Tom de Munk-Kerkmeer
by ABC News photographer
by ABC News photographer

Suddenly  ‘transformation’ had a completely different feel for me…now in the ‘not so much like’ category.

What made your perspective change?

D – Commit to the journey

Thank goodness for people like David Handley, Founder of Sculpture by the Sea. Read the story of his vision here http://www.sculpturebythesea.com/about/history.aspx

A living example of my quote from a couple of weeks ago ….

“The moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one’s favour all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamed would have come his way. Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, begin it now. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it. Begin it now” – W.H. Murray

What is your vision?

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Lx

Filed Under: Random Questions Tagged With: answers, being brave, Bondi to Bronte walk, ocean walks, questions, Sculpture by the Sea

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