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Dan Sumption's avatar

So much here that resonates.

I didn't find a way around my shyness until I was in my mid-30s. It was a camera that I hid behind - and I did literally hide behind it. It was the perfect prop for taking to gigs and events that I would previously have enjoyed (probably) but felt rather awkward at. Primarily, taking photos gave me something to focus on ['scuse pun] and put me into a flow state, when previously I would have been thinking "this is nice, but I hope it ends soon". But also it gave strangers something to talk to me about, and I discovered that I didn't mind them doing so. And finally, it gave me an excuse for ending conversations without awkwardness: "just got to go take some more photos".

Actually, not finally, because I guess where it really started to cook was when I got home. This was around 2006, the heyday of MySpace, where I would post pictures of the gigs on bands' pages. And suddenly I discovered I had loads of "friends". And then I would go out again, and discover that I had loads of *friends*. This online-offline approach to forming friendships has been vital to me ever since the early 90s, most of my closest friends are people I spoke to initially online, although I can see how that can lead to self-selecting ghettoes-of-interest.

And, yeah, the confidence which that experience instilled in me has been a fabulous thing. I'm still, by some measures, dreadfully shy - the idea of approaching a stranger on the street or in the pub fills me with anxiety - but I guess what I really discovered (having very much doubted beforehand) is that I'm fundamentally likeable, and that I thrive when amongst good company. I'm far, far less of a loner than I was back in my 20s.

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Randall Jason Green's avatar

“I sometimes hear about the “evolution of consciousness”, where the assumption seems to be that it’s the conditions of modernity and technological progress that make it possible for people to come “fully alive”, but it seems to me almost the opposite”.

I had short stint in Landscape Architecture so I cannot help but see how many spaces (both digital and physical) are simply not designed for socialization. If socializing is considered at all, the space is somehow similar to the interaction with trans hustler you mention. Most public places for socializing today are almost purely in service of financial transactions and extracting money from a very specific socioeconomic demographic of people.

This summer I got to attend a talk by Roger Reeves, an incredibly powerful poet/writer. (His book Dark Days and recent piece in Emergence Magazine will leave you shattered to bits.) He was raised in the African-American Pentecostal church and brought with him a preacherly way of creating community in a space and room that was designed to focus all attention on the speaker.

Before he began, he asked everyone to turn to their neighbor and “say hi to your neighbor”. I was sitting next to a young openly gay/queer Columbian student who had performed a really brave musical piece/poem the day before. Just that one intervention where I looked at them and said “hi” allowed me to feel connected enough to tell them how much I had enjoyed their piece. Since I wasn’t a student and very much felt like an outsider, I’m certain I wouldn’t have said anything otherwise.

That interaction felt so good that I went up to another student who was extremely shy and had read the day before about being “awkward with sweaty palms” and I told her how much I liked her piece and asked if she would mind an elbow bump. I saw her light up and then go up to someone else right after and tell them how much she liked their piece like a chain reaction happening in real time.

Even at a Buddhist University it was this tradition from the African American church that really opened up and made space and community. By de-centering himself Roger Reeves redirected the audience to see and recognize each other and utterly changed the space by breaking the unidirectional spell we were under.

It was amazing to see just how small of a gesture it took to radically change the entire environment. I couldn’t help but see this as a gift that came from a community with shared experience, struggle, and need to acknowledge and support one another without the expectation of financial transaction.

Thank you 🙏 as always Dougald.

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