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Hi. With this page I'm just simply attempting to bring attention to what I think are
odd (and sometimes just plain stupid) clichés, comments, phrases and other
sayings which I've either heard, read or seen in, on around billboards, bumper stickers, commercials,
conversations, movies, speeches, TV and elsewhere.
Table of Contents:
"Just say 'No' to
negativity"
"Just be positive"
"Earn free stuff for your school"
"Earn Free Gas"
"How are you today?"
"...New Agey ...not ...flakey,
spacey..."
"if you can't read this..."
"not more than 3 to 4"
"less addictive pain medications"
"...the result of a lot of mens'
downfalls..."
"...checked, checked and double-checked."
"shattering the rules of
gravity"
"think quick on my feet"
et cetera, et cetera (formerly, "Redundant Redundancies")
Research = Intuition ?
"Just say 'No' to
negativity"
They are more focused on their philosophical and/or religious aspirations than they are on reality. Forgetting that the very word "No" is negative in and of it self, they include it in this
campaign phrase in their haste to spread the goofy notion that positivity is somehow actually
always "Good" in and of it self.
(I just saw
this one on a bumper sticker today, 20030521, on my way into work)
"Just be positive"
As with the entry on this page called "Just say 'No' to negativity",
this statement reveals something about the world view of the one saying it.
Unlike the other one, this one was actually stated directly to me recently
regarding meeting with a certain group of people that are getting together for
the purpose of discussing things like God; whether God exists, etc.
I was invited and I went. I figured it might be interesting and a chance for me
to invite others to think critically about such things as well.
It wasn't an entirely blind invitation. The meeting is being
organized by someone from a Christian group in Longmont with which I met many
times for such discussions back in 2001. At that time, I had already ceased to
be a believer, but I was still interested in the idea of the community aspect of
it all and decided to go along for the ride when my wife asked me to go and meet
with them.
Our association with that group (in the sense of meeting together regularly for
discussions etc) lasted for apx. a year. It just became too much for some of
them to take that I refused to claim to know for sure that there even is such a
thing as a God, let alone whether or not we know for sure what that God is
like.
They couldn't handle the fact that (even though my past experience as an amateur
Biblical scholar and theologian, worship leader, Bible study leader, teacher and
small-group founder/leader had allowed me the luxury of a vastly richer
understanding of the Bible and God as expressed in the Bible) I don't think it
is appropriate for anyone to claim to know for sure about such things as whether
or not there is a God, or whether or not the Bible is in any way from
that God.
Even though the pastor and I shared some fairly important core ideas in common
and enjoyed meeting with each other and discussing things together; even though
I was a singer/song-writer that expressed through my songs the very heart of the
God they claim to worship more intimately and powerfully than they've ever heard
before, eventually, they asked me to no longer meet with their group due to the
artificial conflict of a non-believer thriving in such ways in the midst of a believer-based
organization.
My wife Karen and I had even been asked if we'd be interested in leading one of
their home fellowship groups at one point. Of course, they eventually decided
that they could not deal with having a non-believer (that knows the heart of the
Living God more deeply and purely than most hard core Christians alive) leading
believers in believer activities etc. So, that never came about.
They couldn't handle the fact that I asked questions; why?, how do you know
that?, where does it say that in the Bible?, what proof do you have for that
assertion?, are you saying that because it's what was passed on to you from your
parents or other people or because it's something you've actually discovered for
your self as a result of studying (the Bible, the Earth, etc)?
My 5th grade teach once stopped me in the hall as I was leaving class one day
and said to me, "Curiosity killed the cat Steven". I think these folks
had the same uncomfortable ideas and feelings swell in their heads when I asked
questions as she did so many years ago.
One way questions are taken is as an attack. If they are taken as an attack,
then they are seen as negative. That's the only reason why, when I was meeting
once again with one of these folks recently that they said to me, "Just be
positive".
I'm sure it will happen again; I will ask questions for which they have no
reasonable answer (or no answer at all), I'll ask another clarifying question
since I didn't gain understanding from the first one; they will sense it as an
attack instead of as an interested individual genuinely attempting to understand
how the other is thinking and where they're coming from and will paint me as the
outsider (which, clearly I am anyway I know) and say that I'm no longer welcome
in their discussions.
Such is life for the freak with the evolved genetic trait of tending to want to
seek to understand systems and figure out how they work and to either make use
of them by replicating them somewhere else or to help them function more
effectively where they're at. Just be positive though, right?
"Earn free stuff for your school"
This is one mistake that our society fell into a long time ago. Actually I think it most likely
inherited it from the last society, and so on, and so on, and so on...
So, what's wrong with this statement? Well, here's a clue... If you have to earn something, then it is not free.
This is not a complicated issue. It has become so clouded by
our goofy thinking and inappropriate usage of words, phrases and concepts, that
most people don't even realize it's there anymore. For instance, "Send us money
to help support our organization and we'll send you this free gift". If you have to send in the money to get it, then it is not a free gift.
Oh ya, another thing...why do we have to use the word "free" if we're already using the word "gift". Since when do we pay for something and then call it a gift (unless of course we're buying something
to give our self a gift or to give as a gift to someone else...that's different, obviously)?
Also, it is only a "gift" if it is given freely and for no reason
other than the desire to do so. If it is given in exchange for products or
services or special treatment or in the form of "paying back a favor"
or any other goofy reason, then it is not actually a gift at all, but a
payment.
Things that we have to pay for are not "gifts", but "products". This is so simple. They even taught it to us as little kids in basic grade school economics. That which is produced is a product. That which is paid for is a purchased product. That which is given away for free, with no strings attached, is a gift.
So, concerning the unconscious question asked above,
"what's wrong with this statement?", the answer is obvious. However,
if you missed it, here it is again... "If you have to earn something, then it is not free."
(I saw this one either on some kind of product packaging or in some kind of news paper or
magazine. I don't recall the exact context of the publication, but the ad was definitely
aimed at children and/or young adults. Entry added 20030521)
"Earn Free Gas"
Yet another like the one just above. I know, there are many of these out there.
You might get tired of me complaining about such crap, but this time I actually
have a screenshot :)
Here it is in my "What's Wrong in this Image" section... the
link
"How are you today?"
Nothing necessarily odd about this question at all. What I'm talking about here
are all the times people say this (or something like it) without any desire to
find out the answer to the question posed by the words coming out of their mouth
at all.
A classic example from my recent past...
I went into an automobile rental store. The woman behind the counter asked me,
"How are you today?" I said, well, do you really want to know or do
you just want me to say "fine, how are you?"? She said, "fine, I
guess". My point gets even clearer (and my satisfaction in carrying out
what I really want to do in life) in the next segment of my interaction with
these people.
After farting around with her for 5 minutes or so trying to
figure out what we wanted to rent, she said, "Ok, you can just wait right
over there. They have to go get the car and bring it here for you and it'll just
be a few minutes." So, I said, "So, a few minutes? How long will it
really be? A few minutes means three minutes the way I usually mean that word.
What do you mean by it?" She said, "It will be at least 10 minutes.
Then they should have the car here for you and you can get on your way" So,
you can see... another place where people say something when they don't really
mean it. I don't know about you, but for me, there's a really big difference
between "a few minutes" and "at least ten minutes". At any
rate, I didn't get harsh with her. I just made the point by bringing it to her
attention and left it at that.
THEN, one of the most brilliant moments of my life.... When
they finally got the car to us (twenty minutes later), the guy that helped us
check it out and sign the paperwork asked us, "So, how's your day been
today?" I said, "Do you really want to know, or is that just the
cordial thing to say?" He said, "The cordial thing to say" So I
said, "Well, then it doesn't matter. Does it?" He said, "Ah....
no. I guess not" Point made. Point understood.
Now I don't know if these interactions have any realistic
chance of ever making a healthy difference in anyone's life, but I try. What the
hell are we doing wasting our time and energy spewing out gobs of nonsense
jibber-jabber when we could be using that same energy in the pursuit of our own
health and well-being in the form of being more open, honest and real with each
other?
(entry added
20030730)
"...New Agey ...not ...flakey, spacey..."
Today, somewhere (I don't recall) on the UCB campus, I heard someone say, "I'm kind of a New Agey kind of
person, but not in a flakey, spacey kind of way though"
...and I thought,
"What?!?" How can they be serious? What's not flakey or spacey about
being "New Agey". Or, I guess maybe I should hold off a bit, step back
and be
more patient and humble and not jump to conclusions about what they mean and ask
the question, "What do you mean by 'New Agey'?" ...but.... nah... we
all know what they mean, don't we? Oh boy.
Seriously though, if they really are "New Agey" and if they refer to
them self as such to associate them self with the "New Age" religion
(Westernized Hinduism) and others that believe in it, then why say something
like, "...but not in a flakey, spacey kind of way"?
I think that's kinda like what I used to say when I was still a believer,
"Well, I'm not exactly a Christian, and I'm not into the official religion
of Christianity, but I do love God with all my heart and I do believe that the
Holy Spirit lives within me and I do believe that Jesus will come back for me
some day after I'm buried and raise me from the dead to go live with him forever
in heaven."
Even as progressive as I was near "the end of the
tunnel" before I finally came all the way out of the land of make-believe,
I was clearly still pretending that I knew for sure something that I could not
have possibly known. I think you get my point... right?
[entry added
20030731_2241]
"if you can't read this..."
One time I saw this on an airplane emergency safety instruction card, "If you can't see well enough to read this, please ask your flight attendant for assistance".
Can you see what bugs me about things like this?
[entry added 20040128_2027]
"not more than 3 to 4"
On a tube of cold sore medication that I recently looked at, the directions
include this phrase, "apply to the affected area not more than 3 to 4 times
daily", but Oops!!, if I apply it a fourth time, then I've applied it more
than three times...right?!
[entry added 20040801]
"...the result of a lot of mens'
downfalls..."
"Women have been the result of a lot of mens' down falls, and it ain't gonna be me", said Nick, on the TV reality show, "The
Apprentice" Thursday night, February 12th (Darwin Day), 2004.
If you can't see what's wrong with this statement, please send me an
e-mail.
Ok, I'll give you a hint... ..... well, no I guess I won't. I'm really curious
to hear what you think. If you can't figure it out I'll be happy to show ya, and
I won't have an attitude against you or think you're stupid or anything like
that at all.
[entry added 20040212 (Darwin Day) _2037]
"...checked, checked and double-checked."
Yep. I actually heard someone say it. This wasn't just any ordinary person
either. This was on a recent TV (and radio) commercial from a famous automobile
dealership in the Denver/Boulder area advertising used automobiles. About
the vehicles, the announcer said, "...everything's been checked, checked and
double-checked".
Anybody that tries to tell me that that's not odd is "itchin for a
fight".
[added 20040418]
Reseach = Intuition ?
Just now (20051109_2009), while watching Martha Stewart's Apprentice TV
show, I heard one of the applicant-candidates say, "Based on all this
research we've done, we have a gut intuition."
I really wanted to
put it up here right away. So, here I am, typing this in while the show
is still going on.
How is it that people like that get to be on TV? I often wonder about
this question. For instance, when watching "American Idol" (I'm a
singer/song-writer) and other 'reality' TV shows that involve things I
am skilled in and excited about doing.
Now, in this case, I'm obviously (or not) not at all excited about being
the apprentice (Martha's or Donald's), but come on.
With comments like, "based on all this research we've done, we have a
gut intuition", I guess I'd wonder about the nature of their 'research'.
If their research equals intuition, then does that mean that their
intuition was the substance of their research in the first place?
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