Showing posts with label expectations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expectations. Show all posts

Monday, June 24, 2013

Expectations: Of the People


I feel this synonym list works very well when it comes to what people expect from us, because it comes in so many forms. People just “want” the best for us, people “fear” the worst of that decision, and people “assume” we’re doing one thing and not another. Media just appears (only later to reign) and words are just representative of the numerous motivations that go into peoples’ expectations. If I had to pick two prepositions to relate people and expectations, it would be “by” and “from” – expectations set “by” people and expectations “from” people. 


Expectations can be set by people before us: friends, siblings, students or girlfriends before us who did or didn’t do certain things. It seems there’s always tension when we challenge expectation, quietly or loudly. It then brings up a question of should we change? We’re warned never to change for anyone…but, what if it’s a good change? Is the issue regarding the principle of change then squashed or proven?


Is it something we would do even if we weren’t with them?

Is it something we see validity in?

Is it showing honor and respect?

Can we modify it to a compromise? 


These questions—and answers—have guided me in deciding how far to “grow.”  


Expectations can be set by people around us: family friends’ children achieving alongside or above us, our socioeconomic environment that has built the infrastructure to feed us into certain levels of education, occupations, and income, and the culture we grew up and/or live in. This could be ethnic or religious culture. But, I’m also thinking of our personal, micro cultures. Mine is composed of small-town living with city sky-rise dreams where college is expected but we’re still applauded when we follow our destiny. One shared facet of this culture is being thankful to have access to education whether it’s in a nation that offers free, quality public schooling or not having to take out loans for what comes next…and simultaneously knowing that I’d endure the same slice (and what would be a whole pie WITH whip crème) if I did what my best friend did; for me, not going to college isn’t an option. Thankfully, I do absolutely love it and enjoy it; from the smell of textbooks to the inked feedback I wait for on my ten page papers. It’s the school decision where I get to personalize my life and make it my own.   Yet, I silently feel that heavy weight of expectation and see the track and path that external expectations have laid out for me. 


I’m often reminded of my expectations when I run into people; the common questions of catching up include school, my writing, and “Are you dating anyone?” or “How is X?” I like these questions because they make me that much more accountable to the things I said I was going to do (and do them), show me people were actually listening and remembering me, and inspire me to wait for nothing less than an amazing relationship to report back. It’s also a boost when I can confirm those things they were expecting of me; fulfilling expectation feels good because we receive that praise and/or elude that harsh/subtle/silent criticism of not coming through. 


But, who likes to answer questions that force them to admit failure? My school choice didn’t work out, “No, nothing yet, just still sending query letters to agents!” or having to admit a break-up and the subsequent tagline you have to cover with because there’s not enough time to explain and give them the full story. I remember when one of my best friends decided college wasn’t for her and in one evening, three people asked the same question, holding the same expectation: “Well, maybe you’ll want to go back later!” Despite the two different educational paths we’re on, I really hope we’re similar—or, rather, I hope I’m just like her to hold myself with such assurance and courage in the face of defying expectation. People’s reactions didn’t send her feet scampering back onto that campus, but planted her that much more firmly in her decision to soar into her career. 




These expectations from people are like a maze: wanting to run the perfect course and get to the exit in the shortest amount of time and most intelligently, while not crashing into any walls (mistakes). It’s also a maze in what we choose to share and omit from certain people. Do you ever have certain friends who get the whole truth and others who get abridged, cropped, and cut versions in order to keep their expectations? 


Why don’t we want to admit our rebellion against that which is their expectation if it’s our decision?

Because sometimes we know certain decisions are mistakes and trust us! we don’t need anyone else to confirm that anymore…! And I’m sorry, but it takes too much energy to convince someone I’m happy in my life, why I’m happy, and am I sure I’m happy? Yes—it’s my life and sometimes there’s no need for analysis.  


The bottom lines is it really doesn’t feel good to get judged, especially when it’s something we’re happy about. Some friends wonder why I keep so much to myself and it’s because I store up those things in my heart so no one can belittle them; they stay perfect and whole without birthing them into my conversation and put them at a guaranteed risk for enduring the measurement of what other people think. 


When we face their expectation and don’t measure up on their number line, we look like a bad person or less than who they thought we were. Thus, it’s just a lot easier to skip over something we’re not obligated to tell them. Ahh, the beauty of language and privacy of our minds. And even more glorious is the truth that it is not his, hers, or their life—but mine, one that is only obligated to the one I’ve given it to. 

Expectations are the things set before us that we are obligated and supposed to follow. We can create them ourselves, manufacturing what we've observed together with what we believe...BUT should we lack that within us, no worry--there's never a shortage of what people think we "should" do.

Monday, June 17, 2013

In Pixels and Print: Expectations from Media



Note: Be advised that the nature of this post, while not inherently or intentionally explicit, includes content that discusses the role and content of digital pornography as it relates to how the perception of this media influences relationships. There are no visual images included; only the ones created by words. 

Not only has technology made our communication more connected, but the way we share information—including pictures and videos. There are commercials, uploaded videos and pictures, music videos, video chats, texts with pictures, Snapchat, Instagram, attached photos on Twitter, and the photos that pop-up the in Facebook newsfeed. 

A significant card to play in this discussion is the sexual influence that has been brought that we must grow-up amongst, specifically our real world being judged against the fantasy pornography aids in creating. Yet, other meaningful expectations brought on by media also exist. How many times have you gone into Instagram, Twitter, or Pinterest and found “inspiring” boards or images of physically fit girls? Is that supposed to “inspire?” Because it seems a comparison like that only makes you feel worse. You see that and can put it away, but when you look up, that image is still with you…as is that comparison you made of yourself when you saw that image. It’s this last part that’s the one you take with you and judge yourself with. Thus, the objective there totally failed—it only made someone feel worse. Regardless of their original aim, media sources and content inherently create expectations for ourselves or someone else who then measures us up against that for comparison. 

Have you ever changed the channel from music videos when your younger brother or sister came in because it wasn’t appropriate for them? Music videos are a great vehicle for putting image or a plot to music, but their influence and extent goes beyond the TV screen. They can perpetrate a lifestyle that isn’t reality, creating an unattainable fantasy that gives way to a frustrating battle to get there. There’s validity in the academic discussions that women do appear as objects or accessories in these clips, because they are simply “appearing” or acting in a way that makes them look disposable, or in a place that any other girl can fulfill. 

More heavily, while this interconnected web did not bring the advent of pornography, it did pioneer the accessibility and ease in which sexual media can be attained. Instead of having to ascertain a physical object, such as a Playboy magazine or adult VHS, one can silently and invisibly hide the images and videos that were once limited to only being tangible. It makes both concealing and garnering pictures and videos that much easier. No longer are you limited to the adult store’s inventory, but you have the world—literally—at your fingertips.   

For us, even if you don’t watch porn, you’re still up against the girls who participate in those pictures and videos. You don’t even have to be a part of it and it’s still the idea you’re “expected” to go by! That was a concept it took—and still takes—my mind awhile to wrap my head around. I’m making not be watching it, but I’m still stacked up against it: I may take strides to keep that influence out of my life, but somehow it’s still found its way in.  

With the Internet and porn, you can find whatever you want. The expectations are set up that you can categorize girls by hair color, body style, or action. There’s that instant gratification as you don’t have fight for anyone else or wait on anyone else to reciprocate your interest—it’s right there. It can be a new girl every time! The thrill of the hunt is always on. There’s no convincing anyone or trying to erode their hesitation into agreement; the experience is simply waiting for your fingers to type, touch, and enter. 

I see the expectations media creates manifesting itself in real life through: 

  • being expected to perform those acts (and with the same fervor and oftentimes, lack of self-care in which they are enacted) (Can we say anal sex?)
  • the debut of pornography into relationships
  • the speed in which guys move on from girl to girl is so much quicker, you can’t help but be tempted to see yourself as dispensable
  • being compared to someone else and judged not to be as competent
  • …so to make up for that “incompetency,” you’re suggested to do “this” or “that” in order to create the fantasy
  • distorting the tangible and intangible: you can’t touch the image before you like you can a human being, but your preference can be skewed by being rewarded by the girl in the video. 

What about the opportunities for personal pornography? I don’t mean making your own videos and photos for commercial use, but what you send over text messages, quick Snapchats, or show on Skype, for example. Not only are you creating a new expectation for someone else, but you might also have been the victim of someone else’s same actions, whether someone person in that guy’s life or what our world has created as a whole. It’s irritating, frustrating, and uncomfortable to have to stand up to that pressure of “Send me a pic ;)” when you know he doesn’t mean a family one. Not only are you left with “How do I respond?” but also, “What am I going to do if I don’t send that?” and that valid question of “Will he still like me?” It’s easy to say, “Oh, he’s not worth it if he wants you to do that.” He might not be worth it, but tell that to the feelings and the self that still likes him. And then…what if you do? Can you ever have peace of mind again once you send yourself in such a permanent way, not knowing the mobile “zip codes” that will see you and living with the threat that the breakdown of a relationship may send that image on its way in revenge?  And what will everyone think when they find out? Judgment is also a part of expectation, because it’s the result of breaking it. 

 A really popular discussion about the bridge between reality and online living is the point self-esteem and technology. Just yesterday I was talking to one of my close friends who was really feeling beat down by all the pictures of people on vacation, traveling, or having fun on Facebook. When you see images like that, it really does instantly bring up your life for reference and parallel the two for your own judgment. The goals of all these interfaces are for “sharing” and “keeping-in-touch,” but they have been manipulated by the wave of humanity and the tide of the human nature to involuntarily create expectation and exploit the result of breaking that belief. The biggest consolation I’ve found is lifting my eyes off of whatever form is before me and remembering that in-person is where I exist and all that matters; when all the pixels and seconds of video have floated away, I’ll be left with just me—so I’ve got to take care of “this” me, the one who lives in the world and not online or even in print.   



Expectations are the things set before us that we are obligated and supposed to follow. We can create them ourselves, manufacturing what we've observed together with what we believe...BUT should we lack that within us, no worry--there's never a shortage of what people think we "should" do.

Monday, June 10, 2013

Expectations: A World of Words


 
Expectations are the things set before us that we are obligated and supposed to follow. We can create them ourselves, manufacturing what we've observed together with what we believe...BUT should we lack that within us, no worry--there's never a shortage of what people think we "should" do.




Words create and reveal new expectations. 

"Nah, we don't need to go out, we can just hang at my house!" On planning a date. The erosion of traditional courtship is basically a eulogy in this suggestion. (And, don't get me wrong, I love chilling! But, let me dress up, show you off, and let you do the same for me, first!) 

"You're getting better at it!" - On kissing. Here we get a comparison to someone else and an assessment of who we are--all by one cutting phrase. 

"You don't like her, right?" On answering to friends on the assessment of another. Morphology, syntax, and organization suddenly build social structures in the flesh of reality before us.

Words themselves almost have an expectation of not meaning much. Plans can be made over text and then never translate to knowing real life, whether it's like verbal plans that never come to fruition or slipping out, like a needle out of fabric. But, secondary methods of communication have changed how accountable we are to sticking to our plans. We can make plans, and then if they don't work out on our end, there's the option to simply quit replying in order to avoid giving the explanation of why it won't work out, especially if it's embarrassing or if it's no longer something we want to do. Following through (keeping a calendar date, showing up, engaging in whatever you said you would, thereby honoring your commitment) is a way of validating words. Here's where we get, "Actions speak louder than words," illustrating that expectation of words is not exclusive to language. Rather, words' true definitions are linked to action.   



In advertisements and academics, studies mix words and numbers to tell us where we "are." I've come to take statistics about my demographic with a grain of salt; not for their accuracy, but of how they capture and project me. I have enough sense of self not to yield to probabilities, whether they are true or simply make a primitive road for me to begin traveling on as I come to believe it. The numbers do represent people, and such numerology and symbols often reduce minds and life to ink we only read over once. Not statistic has power over me. I have power of me. 

How many Tweets have you seen where a guy wants one thing in a girl and you see that in yourself...and then a guy right under him says the complete opposite and you start to view yourself through that lens? How many Tweets from girls who say they're one thing, you identify, then see another, and come back at yourself from a different position? Words silently call us to one and chastise the behavior of the other, instantly making it clear that if we act with option two, we are the undesirable option and no longer living up to the expectation.   

Question: What's the opposite of words?

Silence?

What expectations does silence bring?

The first I think of is the "silence means consent." We often hear this phrase in relation to the "guilt" in sexual assault. But, to give consent, you are passing something over to another to agree, right? In agreeing to sex, saying something with a group about someone else (like verbally having someone sign your signature on a Declaration of Gossip), entering into a relationship...here's a place where we need words, for everyone to know their definition, and that the power and place of words would be recognized. In the first example, it's where we need words by themselves to convey our meaning at full power when our actions suddenly find themselves with no power. In refuting a position we were placed in, here is where we need action to prove *our* words. And though it's a wondrous glory of how word and actions intermix to place us in romance, we need that archaic act of saying, "This is a relationship - I'm yours and you are mine."  

Behold, this is the creation of new expectations in our world of words.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Expectations - A Summer Series




Summer is here! 

Finally, I have back my snow-cone days, breezy dresses, and meeting up under summer nights.  

But, the weather doesn’t discriminate against the obstacles we face; hearts rising and falling under sunny weather. But, the seasonal light reminds us that life is too short and too wonderful to be weighed down by things we can change. Our one life wasn’t made for making comparison—voluntarily or involuntarily. 

What are involuntary comparisons?

Expectations—created by words, media, people, or history. They are the invisible things that we have to fight back against, because otherwise, they’ll take us down.

How do you chart your own path when others have created A, B, C…and Z for you?

Can you move forward in a relationship where the person before you set up a lifestyle you aren’t willing to fulfill?

Is it possible to beat history?

I want to find out.