A Question of Choice
When I was younger I used to love to go “clubbing”. Friends of mine were top DJs playing with Sasha, Digweed and Nigel Benn. Their mixing was flawless and the tune selection always moved the crowd. I learned a lot about djing through them. Although I wasn’t a dance DJ I learned how to construct sets and I was, by all accounts (not mine), a great dj. The proof of this was in the calibre of gigs that I got. I was a mobile music man doing 21sts, weddings, 50ths as well as some plug in and play gigs around town too. I still love the dance music but as a father of two, it’s not easy to get out that much any more and although I stay young at heart, I know that if I were to appear at one of those places, they’d look at me funny. And with good reason. I’m only 40 btw.
One of the things I remember from those heady days was the signs. When a great track would come on some people would hold up a card with “CHOON” or “TOON” written on it. “CHEWIN’” may have been closer to the point. If you were a clubba, you understand. So it got me thinking. I write notes phonetically sometimes such as Thank Ewe or refer to today as Chewsday or even Chooseday. One day I stopped to take a look at what I’d written, Chooseday.
The shortest and most powerful sentence in the English language is “I am”. Full and complete. It’s the answer to a question and it’s a statement. It’s a very powerful statement. I am. Say it out loud in front of a mirror. Look yourself deep in the eyes and day “I am”. I’m puffing out my chest just writing it! I am. Amazing. Powerful. So what does “I” do then to reinforce this fact? Descartes said “Cogito ergo sum”, I think therefore I am. That was in the days before television though. Instead of a lack of education to control the masses these days, I believe that people in a position of power use the television. It keeps the masses docile and let’s them know what to think. Research has shown, in fact, that television causes mild depression. Once we watch TV we don’t have to think. Like a scene from The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy by Douglas Adams, we should, according to Descartes, disappear when we watch it. Ok, so I’m being facile.
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