This man stood there for hours, in the rain, many years ago. It was in Amsterdam, and I've always wished I knew why.
I sat at an ice cream parlor yesterday and overheard a chat at the next table: the vendor of the ice cream place joined an acquaintance, probably a colleague student, who came to visit her. They were in their early twenties. She was telling him about this dream she had about her iPod: how all the songs disappeared from it or something (iPod dreams are very trendy nowadays, so it seems to me). He giggled and told her: “you should read my blog”; “you write a blog”? She asked, “yes”, he replied, and mumbled some stuff that I couldn’t overhear. “I sketch online”, she confessed.
I later thought about him, about this fellow bloger, the only one I met in person so far, and about this amazing blog phenomena; how when people interact there’s always the external interaction; what they say, their mimics and gestures. And then there’s the internal façade, the sub-text: what they think and feel. Both facades, the external and internal don’t necessarily match. The blog enables one to unveil his subtext: You want to know what I really think: hook up to my blog. Want to know how I feel: all you have to do is type my web-address, click 'enter' and there it is: my soul, naked.
It reminded me of this science fiction book written by Robert Silverberg I’ve read many years ago: “the man in the maze”. The book tells the story of an outcast: due to intervention on the part of aliens the protagonist ends up emanating an aura of all of his thoughts and feelings, which proves too poisonous for others to tolerate. The psychic revulsion he elicits in others is not the result of a particularly warped psyche; rather it is the natural condition of being human. Ironically, the (anti)hero is, from a certain perspective, more human than everyone else, because he cannot hide his humanity. His “disease” forces him to withdraw from his fellow humans’ company. He becomes an exile.
So, instead of infesting one another with our feelings and emotions, we type them into our computer and send them out there, to the vast landscape of the Internet. All of us become a bit like the angels in “Wings of Desire”, being able to hear our fellow humans' hidden thoughts. We log on and feel the pulse of humanity. We don’t need to be exiles; we can be blogers.