Oct 28, 2004

Midweek Camping Mania

The mountain can touch Sofia if it reaches just a little bit.

Tired of waiting, I joined a group of insiders for a midweek foray into the woods. After an extremely fast but safe drive, we stopped at a small clearing next to a little stream. The only huge object visible was the full moon, gazing at us serene and inquiring.

We collected wood and lit a fire in the standard scout fashion. I was the slowest of all wood-gatherers, stumbled all the time. But I'm like this, really awkward with hands and feet alike. I liked the pile of wood. To me it signified care and forethought, hard work preceding pleasurable relaxation. I enjoyed the food we'd brought, however couldn't eat as much as the others. Eating is ok, but not among my top 5 choices for passing time.

Talk was much better. We had beer and wine, in moderation (yeah!), and discussed various unrelated topics. The one I seem to remember best was communication and reading people's faces. A friend claimed that online communication does not provide real insight into the other person, because you lack visual info. True, but. Visual info, I argued, sometimes just creates a facade and blocks the real personality. Body language can conceal emotions as well as revealing them, especially when self-control is good. Example: eye contact. Averted eyes are supposed to be a sign of insincerity and insecurity. However, I can force myself to look people straight in the eye and STILL be insecure and insincere. So, an observer may misinterpret visuals as surely as a reader - typed messages. Also, my argument ran, there is something about personality that cannot transpire behind looks. I call it 'underface', and I picture it as a rather unpleasant jelly-like substance just beneath the skin. I know it's anatomically unfeasible;) Still, virtual communication sometimes provides a shortcut to a person's head. And probing another's mind, when the face is invisible, often is both a challenge and a revelation.

There was other talk, of music, art and travelling.

Sleep in the tent was fitful and interrupted by conversations with the moon. The next morning I woke up much later than usual, and took a walk with two photographers who didn't have to hurry for work. I am really lucky to know people like this...

Back in Sofia we learned there had been an earthquake during the night. We missed it, we didn't see a bloodred moon. However, we saw something else. A world with a difference, in a secret place, at an unlikely time.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

To add up to your argument: even when the person wants to reveal a feeling / thought / reaction or so, they may lack the control it takes to be able to express it through their body language.
Honestly. Sometimes it scares me how much of a control I need to let people know the simplest things.
Like, "I'm being friendly". It is so easy to put a smiley after a harsh comment, to let the other person know that you do not mean to hurt them.
Not so in real life. I've found much more complication there, than on the Internet. No wonder people misinterpret what I mean, it really takes a specialised skill, that is, control of my body. The very same thing actors are good at.

I can be more honest online than offline. I can write a smiley even if I am not smiling in front of the monitor. It is enough that the smile is in my head. Or good intention, or friendliness.
Offline, I have to force myself to actually smile, in order to let people know ... something.
It seems hard work to me.
:)