Saturday, February 26, 2011

Sarcasm muchh.

johngeremy:

I was shooting a scene in my new film, No Strings Attached, in which I say to Natalie Portman,

“If you miss me, you can’t text, you can’t email, you can’t post it on my Facebook wall. If you really miss me, you come and see me.”

I began to think of all of the billions of intimate exchanges sent daily via fingers and screens, bouncing between satellites and servers. With all this texting, emailing, and social networking, I started wondering, are we all becoming so in touch with one another that we are in danger of losing touch?

It used to be that boy met girl and they exchanged phone numbers. Anticipation built. They imagined the entire relationship before a call ever happened. The phone rang. Hearts pounded. “Hello?” Followed by a conversation that lasted two hours, but felt like two minutes and would be examined with friends for two weeks. If all went well, a date was arranged. That was then.

Now we exchange numbers, but text instead of call because it mitigates the risks of early failure and eliminates those deafening moments of silence. Now anticipation builds. Bdoop. “It was NICE meeting u.” Both sides overanalyze every word. We talk to a friend, an impromptu Cyrano: “He wrote nice in all caps. What does that mean? What do I write back?” Then we write a response and delete it 10 times before sending a message that will appear to care, but not too much. If all goes well, a date will be arranged.

Whether you like it or not, the digital age has produced a new format for modern romance, and natural selection may be favoring the quick-thumbed quip peddler over the confident, ice-breaking alpha male. Or maybe we are hiding behind the cloak of digital text and spell-check to present superior versions of ourselves while using these less intimate forms of communication to accelerate the courting process. So what’s it really good for?

There is some argument about who actually invented text messaging, but I think it’s safe to say it was a man. Multiple studies have shown that the average man uses about half as many words per day as women, thus text messaging. It eliminates hellos and goodbyes and cuts right to the chase. Now, if that’s not male behavior, I don’t know what is. It’s also great for passing notes. There is something fun about sharing secrets with your date while in the company of others. Think of texting as a modern whisper in your lover’s car.

Sending sweet nothings on Twitter or Facebook is also fun. In some ways, it’s no different than sending flowers to the office: you are declaring your love for everyone to see. Who doesn’t like to be publicly adored? Just remember that what you post is out there and there’s some stuff you can’t un-see. But the reality is that we communicate with every part of our being, and there are times when we must use it all. When someone needs us, he or she needs all of us. There’s no text that can replace a loving touch when someone we love is hurting.

We haven’t lost romance in the digital age, but we may be neglecting it. In doing so, antiquated art forms are taking on new importance. The power of a hand-written letter is greater than ever. It’s personal, deliberate, and means more than an email or text ever will. It has a unique scent. It requires deciphering. But, most importantly, it’s flawed. There are errors in handwriting, punctuation, grammar, and spelling that show our vulnerability. And vulnerability is the essence of romance. It’s the art of being uncalculated, the willingness to look foolish, the courage to say,

“This is me, and I’m interested in you enough to show you my flaws with the hope that you may embrace me for all that I am but, more importantly, all that I am not.”

-- Ashton Kutcher

Chanced upon it while blog-hopping, always felt this way about how improvement in technology has done to us, but i doubt i can ever put it in such nice text. really made so much sense.

Taking technical communtications tis sem. effective comm, tech comm and prof comm are just pain-in-e-ass mods that poor engineers like us have to take in ntu. stupid logic in trying to improve engineers' proficiency in english, when we are listening to such awesome foreign lecturers with their thick accent and broken sentences. This simply proved that having the brains is sufficient, without the language, isnt it? since they can command such high positions in the sacred and pathetic 3 unis in sg. hahha. sarcasm much, kelly.

im just being idiotic here, but i really miss writing GP essays sometimes): and not some reports that have no relation to my life.

Friday, February 11, 2011

my conflicting thoughts.

the new sem has started long ago, and it's like the 3rd week. I oughta start doing some work, cos beginning to feel the lag and the guilt piling up. had so much to do, school work, biz mag shit, making appointment for my dental. andddd. errrhh. i think not really alot! hee. think im just lazy and more lazy. always complaining that im so bored, no shows for me to watch, having no life at all. in fact i think my work can really make me occupied if i were to participate in all.

supposed to go for some Openhouse Ambassador interview for our Union canvassing event. buttttt. i ponned, as usual. sorry. i just dislike making the extra effort to be enthu in stuff. you can call me slack or irresponsible. but you think i really care? heee. not exactly. think its harder for me to do things without a reason. seeing how my friends sell their lives to hall. just for a stay the next year. im sorry, i cant understand why people will do it. wonder where this cold attitude of mine come from. im now just happy with the friends that i've got in my life. enjoy my school life with my crazy coursemates, going home to slack all i want. this is a real pain when you start thinking for the future instead of the present. when people tells you that it's pointless to have abundance of friends and gatherings now, cos in future, you wont really keep much contact with them since all that's important is just the few good ones. im seriously hating those conflicting thoughts in my mind. the realistic side of me, or i should just go for the experience and so called "Living my life to the fullest."

so long since i last blogged, and here i am whining my mind away. feeling so boggled down with these nonsensical thoughts. not sure if it's just those darn hormones making me pms or is it really me that is going mad with too much free time. aisshh. another issue is if i should go for the Global Summer School. feels so tempted to go. it's again the conflict between Experience vs Reality. "Will there be any more chance when you can go overseas and stay for a month, and with friends around you, in future?" VS "Is it needed to spend like 6-7K for the one month just to clear my electives? should i waste all my savings on this?" "but money can be earned back in future right, but the experience cant!" another tempting factor is..... Cos it will be Korea if im going!! heeheee. sounds so exciting at the thought of Lotte World and all the travelling and new culture that i can adapt to! ohh mannnn. ottoke!??? sigghss. think to make some decisions before the date to apply. hope someone will really help me to come to a decision. or maybe lemme have a dream and convince me what i should do. else i would really flip the coin, and use the psychological methodology thereafter!

ps: think im pretty awesome at deceiving myself.
-what you want versus what you can achieve.-