EmiLSecondEssay 2 - 12 Feb 2017 - Main.EbenMoglen
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< < | It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted. | | Me, the Machine, and Procrastination | | But Eben always said that if you want people to change, tell them their children are at risk. I feel like I helped raise my brother, but so did the Internet. So I know that despite whatever psychological payoff I seemingly find in procrastinating on just about everything, watching my brother live a digital life completely unaware of what he is sacrificing, is enough to force me to take the basic steps to reclaim my autonomy. I will worry about changing the way our laws understand privacy later. | |
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There are two important themes here, not necessarily closely-related
enough to one another to work well in a short essay.
First, there's the theme of procrastination in your worklife. You
see that there is a relationship between your mental acuity and your
procrastination: if you were not capable of surviving the "tests" of
educational evaluation while postponing preparation, the choice
between timely preparation and failure would be stark. But you
believe that the way you use time is a character failure, and that
the best motivation for change is fear. These are unexamined
assumptions that would benefit from a closer look.
Bright young students procrastinate in the US not only because they
can (which would not be as true in a rote-memorization and
cramming culture, policed by adult tyranny, such as many East Asian
educational contexts), but also because they should. In a very
competitive but not very demanding system, superbrights will be
deprived of love of learning in the school setting---which does not
adequately recognize what they can do and should be expected to do
in learning---and will not believe in their successes, because they
know how easily those evaluations can be won. They apply the effort
required, which is slight, and invest their time in not doing
schoolwork, which is not joyful.
Fear of failure is not a good motivator for learning, in general,
and it works particularly poorly with those who can always get by.
The result is an anxious life, but not optimal learning or optimal
self-realization.
The second theme is really about the difficulties of teaching, which
overlaps with the first theme in the imagined Eben who does not
create deadlines that would inhibit procrastination, and the
imagined Emi, who should have kept her brother from welcoming
expensive surveillance equipment into his room.
Here, the teaching problem wasn't your failure to have a
conversation you procrastinated. Trying to teach people not to want
cool stuff because it might hurt them is not usually possible. With
adolescents, the odds of success are reduced near zero. An object
with that much apparent magic power must be improved upon rather
than insulted, if the attraction to primate hormonal imbalance is to
be counteracted. Writing about why it is hard to improve on this
piece of surveillance crap in achieving every teenage boy's dream of
automating his living space, while at the same time acknowledging
the reasons young primates will have these wishes, would be a
terrific essay.
As would be the recognition that ideas develop over time in even the
fastest human mind. Why, therefore, giving thinking and writing as
much "time in the cask" as possible is a reasonable goal for a
powerful thinker. Why the relationship of mind-time to work-time is
therefore complicated for all thought-workers, and more complicated
for those whose cognitive powers are off the ordinary human scale,
the "superbright" intellects on whom human society is always
especially dependent, and about which it is always especially
ambivalent. Why the oscillation between extension of thinking time
and fear of failure that always impends and never quite happens is
therefore a frequent psychological problem to such people. From
this, a better and less automatic way to think about your own
situation might result. And from the moment that oscillation ceases
to be unconscious and automatic, it ceases to imprison you anymore.
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EmiLSecondEssay 1 - 01 Jan 2017 - Main.EmiL
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META TOPICPARENT | name="SecondEssay" |
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.
Me, the Machine, and Procrastination
-- By EmiL - 01 Jan 2017
Diagnosis
I diagnosed myself as a Severe Procrastinator my sophomore year in college after turning in my first twenty-five page paper after having written and researched the entire thing in the previous twenty-four hours. Misunderstanding the graduate teaching assistant’s apathy and low standards for my intelligence, I downgraded my diagnosis to Moderate Procrastinator. I wish I had gotten an F because perhaps then, out of fear that my entire future would be jeopardized, I could have changed my ways. Alas, now I accelerate towards full-time adulting, the consequences of my most recent procrastination incidents strike me a more concerning both for my ability to become the kind of lawyer that I hope and believe I am capable of being as well as how it may limit my contributions to my family and community.
The Neverending Essay
Hard deadlines are the saving grace of high-functioning procrastinators. They are among the few things that induce sufficient panic and shame to bring us to complete tasks. So far as I can tell, completing tasks by arbitrary deadlines have never been a defining feature of this class. Which as a student genuinely interested in learning, I have appreciated. However, as future professional that must learn to use her discretion to complete tasks in a timely manner, this course has been my Achilles heel. To be fair, I haven’t done it alone. The Net has been my constant companion through all four of my failed attempts to complete this essay. Attempt two seemed promising— a critical analysis of various Black Mirror episodes’ depiction of the ultimate erasure of privacy— but then the Machine stepped in. Netflix’s Autoplay and a well-timed Seamless delivery conspired to rob me of time I had set aside to write my essay. My binge was cut short only when the mounting stress of an impending deadline for another project could no longer be suppressed by Charlie Brooker’s dystopian unrealities.
By my third attempt, I had relegated Black Mirror to a conversation at Arts & Crafts and had come up with some other brilliant idea that was much more deserving of the written word, rigorous feedback, and revision. But once weakness gave way to the numbing comfort of searching for Christmas presents on Amazon and the imminence of final exams thwarted my third attempt. Without the fear public shame, the machines gentle suggestion of “You may like this” or a seven second countdown was enough to derail my genuine academic interests.
A Christmas Gift
Eventually Eben will be required to submit grades, so a deadline does indeed exist to submit this essay. What does not have a deadline is actually changing my habits, learning skills necessary to be autonomous, trying to tell others about the true cost of “free” services. Since last April, I’ve told myself that I would sit down with my younger brother, a child of the new century, and really explain to him all I have learned about the implications of using his typical internet activity and encourage him to channel his enthusiasm for new technology into free software. Safe to say I’ve managed to put it off for the better part of a year. No deadline right.
Then on Christmas day, I watched my brother unwrap his last gift-- a Google Home. With a twinkle in his eye he raised it to the sky like young Simba as he thanked my mom profusely. I felt before I thought. A sinking feeling in my stomach as he raced to his room to find a place on the shelf for his new toy. Not only has my procrastination led to an exhausting and potentially destructive cycle when it comes to my academic career, but my failure to have a simple conversation had led to watch my brother coddle the device as if it were Precious rather than the expensive piece of surveillance equipment that it is. Worse still, my failure to change my own habits would have made any conversation I did try and have with him lack all credibility.
A New Year’s Resolution
Writing down these most recent moments of procrastination it is very clear to me that anyone reading this would likely just conclude that I am simply lazy or apathetic. That same thought has crossed my mind countless times in the moments after I’ve turned in an assignment just under the wire. But ultimately, I have rejected the notion that my procrastination is just a function of product of apathy. Not when it comes to freedom and the net. After eight months of messaging, what once seemed like hyperbole, employed as a pedagogical tool, I have now come to view a merely adequate description of the current state of the world. And yet, the my most drastic change I have made has been to keep my cellphone in a different room than where I am rather than toting it around.
But Eben always said that if you want people to change, tell them their children are at risk. I feel like I helped raise my brother, but so did the Internet. So I know that despite whatever psychological payoff I seemingly find in procrastinating on just about everything, watching my brother live a digital life completely unaware of what he is sacrificing, is enough to force me to take the basic steps to reclaim my autonomy. I will worry about changing the way our laws understand privacy later.
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.
To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:
Note: TWiki has strict formatting rules for preference declarations. Make sure you preserve the three spaces, asterisk, and extra space at the beginning of these lines. If you wish to give access to any other users simply add them to the comma separated ALLOWTOPICVIEW list. |
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Revision 2 | r2 - 12 Feb 2017 - 17:09:27 - EbenMoglen |
Revision 1 | r1 - 01 Jan 2017 - 07:35:35 - EmiL |
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