07.09.07

Gothic Confidential

Posted in Canada, Goth, Victorian London, facebook, subcultures, virtual life at 7:39 am by zakira

Or… Confessional, perhaps. The truth is, I’ve never belonged to one of those identifiable sub-cultures – never been a punk or a hippie activist or a goth or even a member of a superculture like preppies or yuppies or, as we all took to calling them, “normals.” I’ve never been quite geeky enough to be a geek (though, definitely nerdy enough to point out that a true geek is a circus performer who bites the heads of animals, most frequently chickens, and that, therefore, Alice Cooper was actually a geek). I’ve never fit into the superculture, never been quite ‘up’ on the stars (though always did like astrology) and never really knew the details of the megakillers on trial (except relating to the war in Iraq but that’s another post altogether isn’t it, and Bush isn’t on trial…yet).

This is not to say that I didn’t want to fit in, that I don’t yearn for community and belonging, but that i have too many arms to fit in the dolly mold. I’ve accepted I’ll never be quite like them (whoever and whatever they are), but that I can still love and be loved by them.

So, where’s the confession? It’s here: there’s one culture I love to observe. More than Rockabilly Punks and the burlesque girls who entertain them, more than the spelt-bread and quinoa-eating natural foodsies, more than the chunk-streak-hair lululemon-wearing tarts who adorn robson street like some kind of rapidly proliferating fungus, I love the Goths.

I love that they are an international community of people who all think they are alone in their misery. I love their sardonic self-obsession, their sarcastic humour and their deathlier-than-thou aspect. I love their aggressive self-consciousness, their total devotion to fashion and music, and their complete subjugation of non-goth-compliant personality traits.

I love the bravery it takes to walk down the street and know normals are staring (and real punks are scoffing). I mean, this is probably the one subculture that can cause both laughter and fear at the same time.

I float near them without their knowing. Venus Flytrap isn’t aware of the gnat nearby. I cannot help it. I saw a pair of them leaving the station the other day and when they took the stairs instead of the escalator, I couldn’t help but follow. I stare openly. I drink in their platform boots and skinny black-jeans, their layered shades of black velour and polyester shirting and their long stringy purposefully unkempt hair. I loved their hats – a bowler and a top hat, and their matching nightmare-before-christmas bags. I can’t help but whisper under my breath ‘where are you going, little goths’ and then catch myself, realizing I am sounding very, very creepy.

I especially love that goths on facebook try to seem as morosely sexy as possible. They are perfecting the art of kohl-rimmed eyes that say both ‘come hither’ and ‘one day we shall all turn to dust’. The girls love to take pictures of themselves from above, so all you see is forehead and eyes, and their sad, tiny mouths are turned into Louise Brooks. The boys do the same, I suppose hoping to express their disinterest in footballer masculinity by evoking allusions to proto-goth electronic musicians of the late seventies and early to mid eigthies.

When I was in school, I chose a few goths to follow around, whenever I saw them walk across the concourse, I followed them. I enjoyed them from afar. When I was in Calgary I’d go the club and watch the elastic boy-goth dance with the long chain around his neck, spider legs and arms arcing in ecstatic expression. He wore pain like one of those bright-orange vests city workers wear so cars don’t hit them.

I think as long as we have an idea of normal, we’ll have self-marginalizing homogenized sets of individuals using clothing, music, and weltanschauung to create an alternative. What I love most about the goths, and what makes me stalk them, is their protest against this culture’s requirement of happiness and contentment as the only allowable emotion. Like the Jesters in the King’s Court, they too provide a valuable service. They remind us that lurking beneath the cover of zoloft, success-though-a-whitened-smile, and yoga-ballet, the darkness awaits. It’s the only way to have balance in the world.

06.17.07

Virtual Insecurity

Posted in facebook, online relationships, virtual life at 4:59 pm by zakira

At what point did ‘virtual’ come to mean ‘actual’?  Or ‘link’ come to mean ‘friend’? Facebook appears to be one giant high school reunion. I suppose in some ways I’m making it that way, obsessively joining alumni groups the like of which if experienced corporealy would give me the willies, clammy skin and nausea at the notion of spending more than two minutes in a group small talk situation.

Face to Face  = Facebook. We are all face to face now, after all: all we are is faces without bodies. The disembodied heads of videophones, the first floating avatars of noncorporeality, the thumbnails of people we never knew very well, just increasing the dismemberment we experience as we increase our membership in group and network and site.   And we link to individuals in hopes the everincreasing number of so-called friends will increase our own acquisitional pride.

This high school cafeteria where no one wants to sit with you and everyone wants to sit with someone who knows someone you know is a new addiction. We can’t help but connect, can’t belp but broadcast our seeds across this little earth hoping something will take root, hoping something will reach someone.

Attendance at a high school reunion is typically accompanied by a few essential concerns. There is the worry that you did not achieve the potential your demeanor and aptitudes promised. There is the concern that a community that judged you primarily on appearance and carriage will either (a) be repulsed and horrified by your drooping features and altered size or shape, or (b) be inappropriately shocked by the improvement in your features/size./shape. I’d also say there’s a need to practise one’s ‘accomplishments speech’ which would count for small talk at one of these events, since no one really wants to ask if you ever kicked that drug habit or learned to control the schizophrenia.  Then there’s the awkward silence that persists after ‘it’s been so long’…

No one likes an awkward silence (reference the cel phone ads about ‘no more dropped calls’ in which a variety of personalities reveal intimate information that requires validation to a nil response due to technical malfunctions). But in the new world both time and distance has ceased to exist.  The concept of Instant is completely false – instant messaging is supposed to guarantee that the recipient of your missive will be sitting at constant attention waiting your every word. Inevitably s/he will have gone to the bathroom, shut off the computer because mom walked in, or become distracted by a fifth IM partner… leading, once again to the awkward silence. However in the new and fragmented personal world we are so isolated that our awkward silences are ours alone.  Your intended recipient responds as soon as soon as s/he has seen your message. That’s the best you could hope for. S/he’s done nothing wrong. And you were a fool to sit by the computer watching the seconds tick by.

Why is she babbling about this, my invisible and potentially nonexistent readership wonders. Well this will lead me to my latest adventure, of social risk-taking in the virtual world. I have sent two messages that invite people who may or may not be the people I remember, to be in contact with me. I await one of three possible outcomes: they will not respond, they will not be the person i remember, they will be the person I remember (and potentially be a little creeped out/concerned that I have so much time on my hands that I can spend it looking up strangers on the net).  Unfortunately the first option involves the personal awkward silence (PAS) and the second could involve a PAS as, without much investment in the outcome, my recipient may delay or even defer response until a much later date.

The second installment of this could involve a deeper issue that i will get into at a later date – my problems composing an Accomplishments Statement.