Dear Bloggers,
The last couple of days
rain has been pooring down and due to the bad weather I once again
sat musing about the past and I write on a piece of "nostalgia
of the long gone years" I sit behind the computer and think back
to my childhood that I was laying on the floor playing with a couple
of miniature cars and my mother meanwhile handled the vacuum cleaner,
I still remember the typical smell of soft soap and feel the warm air
blow from the vacuumcleaner onto my face. For me a reason to write my
earliest memories down.
I therefore look forward
to your earliest memories. And maybe you would love to share that
with all of us.
How far can you go back
with your memories? I cannot tell that as these imprints are
absolutly different per person. I know that there were quite a few
events in my childhood that I can pick up as they are forever printed
in my mind. Just everyday things, nothing special.
For example, I remember
that I once stood in the dining room in front of the table and I was
determined to sse something on the table. Just standing on my toes
and holding onto it I was able to look at some items on the table.
That was the first moment to me of being proud as I felt very big
because I could look across the table for the first time instead of
looking against it. No idea how old I was, but it os strange that you
remember that moment and that feeling.
I have two sisters and one
brother, I was the youngest. My father worked in a factory and my
mother was a housewife so we were an ordinary family. I was dropped
of every schoolday by my mother at the kindergarten, who continued
with groceryshopping and housework. My mother made the most delicious
coffee and my father was reading the newspaper in the cozy living
room in a lovely big armchair. Then the TV came on to watch the
evening news. Life was not that complicated at those years. If you
wanted to comment on something you had to do that in person or write
a letter to newspaper and send it by mail to them. It would make you
think first.
These are sort of my
earliest memories. So they go back to my fourth year of life. I
wonder how far you go back memories. In our present time everything
is much more hectic. We have become terrified of missing something,
the so-called FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out)
In the opinionstorm of
print and broadcast the storm continues to print paper and the role
of reflection. And the people who really read, can often write better
as a matter of fact.
Besides seeing writing as
unique art or craft that can teach many, there is a third form: thumb
typing. That is everywhere. We live in a time when everyone writes
and no one reads. And gives opinions. Published in a second. What is
the function of editorial pages as the slow process of printing and
paper making way for fast printing and sending?
In the summer of 2008, I
first came into contact with the iPhone which at that time was for
the first time in the Netherlands for sale exclusively for the phone
company T-Mobile. This device accelerated ease the mind revolution
that was going on in evening talk shows, blogs and reader comments in
the Internet published pieces.
In those days you rather
read a book as many other passengers on the bus or train or they were
hiding behind a small free or paid large newspaper, suddenly everyone
was putting himself or herself to writing. At first only
textmessages, but soon via mobile internet we could write on almost
anything. With the iPhone and its imitators were also Facebook and
other platforms accessible. On train platforms and in waiting rooms
and train chairs in rows for cash, bike and even in the car you see
people sitting fixated tapping their small personal screen. Even Her
Majesty Queen Beatrix had noticed this: "People communicate
through rapid brief messages," she noted in her Christmas speech
2009.
The newspaper editors were
to be exempted to remove a sludge of invective between the reader
comments. For direct response digital was something different from
the classic letter to the newspaper. Every drunk could, once ended up
at home, his twaddle hurtle directly to a site without a stamp and
without any reflection. He did not even had to count to ten.
The late ramblings in the
pub became public. Anti-Semites, racists, violent characters, many
anonymous.
The question is: Is there
someone out there who reads three hundred reactions on an article
about asylum seekers still? We thought we let everyone have their
say. But the people under our articles appeared to consist of a dozen
people who responded to each other, including a bitchfight between an
artist from Rotterdam and a lady from Spain.
A number of sites managed
to perfect the art of swearing to a profession, and sometimes it's
funny too. All authors. More and more people made their own little
newspaper on Facebook, some with thousands of "friends". It
could even shorter, with 140 characters on Twitter, launched in 2006
and 2009 really established in the Netherlands.
Everywhere you had to
respond and scold became an art how can insult someone as hard as
possible and then preferably also anonymous. Yes those are the real
heroes in our society. However, it takes all this attention only
briefly. Because they are greedy for sensation and as many people
should be destroyed. And after a day or two it has been all forgotten
again. Because you have to be on time with the new little storm.
In this digital bath full
of hissing fury remains a printed and online opinion page in the
newspapers regularly a stunning slow journalism island. Submitted
papers to read and talk about and corresponding. Checked information.
Topics devise and get there in the best possible author. That can
come from the Netherlands, but as well from the US, Germany or Peru.
Preferably not someone from the editors, because they are having
enough text elsewhere in the paper. Many experts, writers and
essayists that protrude above the mass opinion. That show what the
reflection of paper for printing and has the nervousness of Twitter
and a blog. A good opinion piece is simple: it contains a clear
opinion contained in an argument with examples.
If that is in theory.
If authors are skilled
with the pen, they quickly in the newspaper. Knowledge and expertise
is a recommendation, but it can also turn against the author. Too
much knowledge is assumed to be known, you get lost in details.
Others are afraid to upset colleagues so alone desirability as
"sustainability" or "future-proofing". Which
often mean the opposite of what is intended. With opinion pieces is
no diplomacy businesses.
Ask for a clear piece is
sometimes like you are strapped with your hands on to a bicycle and
get on it. Politicians rarely want to give a non-predictable opinion.
Timing is also part of their profession. There is the distinct
ideology of a party, but everyone knows already. Not surprisingly,
the ANWB who wants to build more roads. And every article on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict raises many reactions against but the
arguments are the same age and known as the battle itself.
I've got respect for the
men and women who send every day ten to fifty pieces and letters in
the electronic mailbox of the newspaper to ensure their voices.
Especially men like me, middle age or older, who want to share their
experiences. In good spirits, while only two pieces of post, internet
with it some more. Brave they fall for the papers firing squad, and
the rejection they take on in a sporty way.
Why women dare to come
less often with their opinion? Besides being less confident it should
also be efficient: why do all that work to do with a very uncertain
outcome? At least that is my opinion,
Fortunately, there are
people who can still be thankful sitting down with a real newspaper
who are still being made for real readers. They can often also write
well. They know a lot, point out mistakes, put in a letter of two
hundred words telling you the difference between a piano and a
keyboard or the possibilities of a vacant building.
That kind of spontaneous
reactions, surprising authors, new topics, deliciously absurd entries
and commentaries I will miss, because more and more newspapers are
getting in trouble for the simple fact that people no longer buy one
to quietly sit down and read. Now I have myself thrown in the army of
millions of enthusiastic writers. And I secretly hope that someone
actually will read my stories.
The Old Sailor.