Rosa




I'm doing 31 things
 

Rosa's Life List

  1. 1. learn about herbs
    1 entry . 3 cheers
    5 people
  2. 2. be an activist
    2 cheers
    101 people
  3. 3. write down my bones
    3 entries . 5 cheers
    1 person
  4. 4. stick with my guitar playing
    12 cheers
    1 person
  5. 5. feel beautiful
    2 entries . 12 cheers
    2,057 people
  6. 6. meditate everyday for 30 days
    2 entries . 4 cheers
    3 people
  7. 7. exercise gently
    4 entries . 3 cheers
    1 person
  8. 8. think of several creative projects to do in 2007, and do them
    8 cheers
    1 person
  9. 9. write down interesting things from books I read
    1 entry . 3 cheers
    2 people
  10. 10. admit my wild dreams to myself
    2 entries . 12 cheers
    1 person
  11. 11. comb through my belief systems and loosen and untangle myself
    7 cheers
    2 people
  12. 12. go easier on myself and give myself credit
    12 cheers
    1 person
  13. 13. I want to be FULL of health
    3 entries . 12 cheers
    1 person
  14. 14. live as though my wildest dreams will happen
    13 cheers
    1 person
  15. 15. multitask less
    7 cheers
    2 people
  16. 16. improve my daily routine
    2 entries . 2 cheers
    1 person
  17. 17. have creative space in my bedroom
    2 entries . 8 cheers
    2 people
  18. 18. make my own clothes
    2 entries . 4 cheers
    2,196 people
  19. 19. find many little creative ways to show someone I love them
    5 entries . 6 cheers
    1 person
  20. 20. meet my soul mate
    6 cheers
    152 people
  21. 21. talk to Joel on the phone
    1 person
  22. 22. record my dreams
    1 entry
    329 people
  23. 23. live in an earthship
    1 entry . 3 cheers
    11 people
  24. 24. plant trees (lots and lots of them)
    7 cheers
    3 people
  25. 25. dance and dance and dance
    2 entries . 5 cheers
    2 people
  26. 26. sing
    3 entries . 3 cheers
    2,130 people
  27. 27. be around animals more
    4 cheers
    1 person
  28. 28. go and see dance performances
    5 cheers
    1 person
  29. 29. remember birthdays
    1 cheer
    265 people
  30. 30. give blood regularly
    1 entry . 7 cheers
    141 people
  31. 31. learn another language
    3,734 people
Recent entries
be a better vegan (read all 4 entries…)
The Rhetoric of Apology in Animal Rights: By Karen Davis, PhD 2 years ago

I thought this was interesting, hope you like it :)

Speech, July 1O, National Alliance for Animals Seventh Annual International Animal Rights Symposium, July 8 through July 1O, 1994, Washington Dulles Marriott

Several years ago I published an article in Between the Species entitled “The Otherness of Animals” (Fall 1988). In it, I urged that in order to avoid contributing to some of the very attitudes towards other animals that we seek to change, we need to raise fundamental questions about the way that we, the defenders of animals, actually conceive of them. One question that needs to be raised concerns our tendency to deprecate ourselves, the animals, and our goals when speaking before the press and the public. Often we “apologize” for animals and our feelings for them. In Between the Species, I argued, “Anxious not to alienate others from our cause, half doubtful of our own minds at times in a world which views other animals so much differently than we do, we are liable to find ourselves presenting them apologetically at Court, spiffed up to seem more human, capable, ladies and gentlemen, of performing Ameslan [American sign language] in six languages. . . .”

We apologize in many different ways. More than once, I have been warned by an animal protectionist that the public will never care about chickens, and that the only way to get people to stop eating chickens is to concentrate on things like health and the environment. However, to take this defeatist view is to create a self-fulfilling prophecy. If we, the spokespersons for animals, decide in advance that no one will ever really care about them, we will convey this message to the public. Insisting that others will never care about chickens projects the feeling, “I don’t think that I can ever care much about chickens.”

This negative attitude about chickens epitomizes the apologetic mode of discourse in animal rights. It is the “I know I sound crazy, but . . .” approach to the public. If we find ourselves “apologizing” for other animals, we need to ask ourselves why we do this. Is it an expression of self-doubt? A deliberate strategy? Either way, I believe that the rhetoric of apology harms our movement tremendously. Following are some examples of what I mean.

1. Reassuring the public, “Don’t worry. Vegetarianism isn’t going to come overnight.” We should ask ourselves the question: if I were fighting to end human slavery, child abuse, or some other human-created oppression, would I seek to placate the public or the offender by reassuring them that the offense will still go on for a long time and that we are only trying to phase it out gradually? Why, instead of defending vegetarianism are we not affirming it?

2. Patronizing animals: “Of course they’re only animals. Of course they can’t reason the way we do. Of course they can’t appreciate a symphony or paint a great work of art, but . . .” In fact, few people live their lives according to “reason,” or appreciate symphonies, or paint works of art. As humans beings we do not know what it feels like to have wings or to take flight from within our own bodies or to live naturally within the sea. Our species represents a smidgeon of the world’s experience, yet we patronize everything outside our domain.

3. Comparing competent, adult nonhuman animals with human infants and people who are mentally defective. This is an extension of number 2. Do we honestly believe that all of the other creatures on earth have a mental life and range of experiences that are comparable to diminished human capacity and the sensations of newborn babies? Except within the legal system, where all forms of life that are helpless against human assault should be classified together and defended on similar grounds, this analogy is both arrogant and logically absurd.

4. Starting a sentence with, “I know these animals aren’t as cute as other animals, but . . .” Do you say to your child, “I know Bill isn’t as cut as Tom, but you still have to play with him”? Why put a foregone conclusion in people’s minds? Why even suggest that physical appearance and conventionalized notions of attractiveness are relevant to anything that matters in a relationship?

5. Letting ourselves be intimidated by “science says,” “producers know best” and charges of “anthropomorphism.” We are related to other animals through evolution. Our empathic judgments reflect this fact. It does not take special credentials to know that, for example, a hen confined in a wire cage is suffering, or to imagine what her feelings must be compared with those of a hen ranging outside in the grass. We are told that humans are capable of knowing just about anything we want to know—except what it feels like to be one of our victims. Intellectual confidence is needed here, not submission to the epistemological deficiencies, cynicism, and intimidation tactics of profiteers.

6. Letting the other side identify and define who we are. I once heard a demonstrator tell a member of the press at a protest at a chicken slaughterhouse, “I’m sure Frank Perdue thinks we’re all a bunch of kooks for caring about chickens, but. . .” Ask yourself: does it matter what the Frank Perdues of this world “think” about anything? Can you imagine Frank Perdue standing in front of a camera, saying, ‘I know the animal rights advocates think I’m a kook, but . . .”?

7. Needing to “prove” that we care about people, too. The next time someone challenges you about not caring about people, ask them what they’re working on. Whatever they say, say, “But why aren’t you working on _? Don’t you care about ____?” We care deeply about many things; however, we cannot devote our primary time and energy to all of them. We must focus our attention and direct our resources. Moreover, to seek to enlarge the human capacity for justice and compassion is to care about and to work for people.

8. Needing to “pad” and bolster our concerns about animals and animal abuse. This is an extension of number 7. In keeping with the need to recognize the links of oppression and the indivisibility of social justice concerns, it is imperative to recognize that the abuse of animals is a human problem that is as serious as any other abuse. Unfortunately, the victims of homo sapiens are legion. As individuals and groups, we cannot give equal time to every category of injustice. We must go where our heartstrings pull us the most, and do the best that we can with the confidence that is needed to change the world.

The rhetoric of apology in animal rights is an extension of the “unconscious contributions to one’s undoing” described by the child psychologist, Bruno Bettelheim.* He pointed out that human victims will often “collaborate” unconsciously with an oppressor in the vain hope of winning the oppressor’s favor.

In fighting for animals and animal rights against the collective human oppressor, we assume the role of vicarious victims. To apologize in this role is to betray “ourselves” profoundly. We need to understand why and how this can happen. As Bettelheim explained, “But at the same time, understanding the possibility of such unconscious contributions to one’s undoing also opens the way for doing something about the experience—namely, preparing oneself better to fight in the external world against conditions which might induce one unconsciously to facilitate the work of the destroyer.”

We must prepare ourselves this way. If we feel that we must apologize, let us apologize to the animals, not for them.



exercise gently (read all 4 entries…)
Eee. 2 years ago

My mum dragged the rebounder up from the depths of the cellar this week. It was dusty and cranky from being shut away for so long, and I sucked the dirt off it with the hoover before wiping it down with a damp cloth. The red plastic rim started to show through the brown; I wonder how long we’ve had it down there? It’s been years since my grandmother broke her leg. She used this as part of her rehabilitation and turned up one day with it saying she didn’t want it cluttering up her house, take it please.

I tried the rebounder out in front of the window in the living room. I thought the springs would be stiff and complain loudly but they bounced happily as I shifted my weight on it precariously. It’s my new muscle making machine.

At first I could manage about thirty seconds of “being brave” on it before the dizzyness came and I toppled over onto the sofa, the room swimming. (Here’s why.) I kept at it, doing it again the next day and the next and the next… Holy hallowe’en Batman, I can do almost five minutes now! That’s real progress :)



improve my daily routine (read all 2 entries…)
I wrote this in bed, thinking of this goal when I had insomnia 2 years ago

Sleep is so boring. No, okay, I take that back. Sleep is magnificent, and dreams are so weird and beautiful and I love them.
No, what’s tedious about sleep is achingly lying here for hours waiting for it to happen, my sore body pinned down by the dark and by loneliness, a pillow at my side clutched fondly under one arm.
This is awkward. Part of me really wishes for sleep to happen, but I can feel this other part of me pushing it away, holding it out at arms length so I’m forced to spend some time with myself.
How crazy and embarrassing is that? I‘ve been ignoring myself. This is my life, slap bang in the middle of it, and I’ve been ignoring myself. Who am I? Who’s this in this body I’ve been lugging around for so long? I don’t know but I’d sealed up parts of myself, folded them up into envelopes, and pocketed them away until – until what? Until I can be bothered or brave enough to be who I am, maybe. Sometimes that takes a lot of energy. I could move an inch left or right, curl my way forwards rather than feel like I have to gallop.
Hmmmm. So here I am. 5.35am ignoring myself.
I was shocked when I realised half the year was already over and I hadn’t even written down any creative dreams or projects to do. Where have I been? I remember writing that goal and I felt so clear and excited about it at the time. I’ve had some personal creative projects, one kept secret and kept inside my inner life, but the others? Maybe I’ve been on hold. But… no. that’s wrong too, I can feel so many micro movements steaming up on the inside of me, moving like many little legs, turning into condensation and soon rain.
I really need to refresh myself, take a long plunge into life again, take a big sweeping nose dive from somewhere high, or, at least, dip my toes in and bob my head under for a while, let my hair fan out like long ropey sea weed in the water.
I need to hit the back button a moment and spin it another way.
So. Things are coming together under the surface, circling, rising… and writing is a way forward.

I’ll have an eye on my daily routine and let things unravel. Sleep now, Rosa.



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