QUOTES!?%#* 🙂
ok — so, over the past few months I’ve read a couple of facebook articles commenting, listing and spelling out reasons why we should stop posting famous/well-known quotes on our fb pages, websites and on the internet in general.
My first reaction upon reading this was, I admit, defensive.
~ yes, I am a therapist
~ no, I do not have perfect, spontaneous, healthy, appropriate responses at my fingertips 100% of the time
Quotes – just look at my website; it’s plastered with the frickin’ things!
I do have a bunch of them to defend; everything from The Dalai Lama to Daffy Duck
sigh…
So, after a few deep breaths, a meditation/contemplation combo, a nap, composing myself best I could, a stiff drink, and a quick call to my therapist,
AND ..
..being the devil’s advocate and pot-stirrer that I am, I am now prepared to RESPOND, as opposed to react, to said comments and directives.
Comment & Directive # 1. This is the internet folks! Readers are looking for originality. Take a risk – express yourself. Don’t just rehash someone else’s quotable insights by pairing them with a new, eye-catching photo. Readers don’t want out-dated, old-fogey platitudes, banal generalisations and vacuous, meaningless (perhaps even offensive) pablum.
My Enlightened Response: Of course they do! What planet are you living on?
Ok, ok sorry …I’ll start again
Firstly, what’s truely original? We all have influence, we inspire one another. We ‘steal’ (usually unconsciously) ideas, concepts and possibilities from each other; and that, I think, is a good thing. Commonly understood truths, wisdom and understandings are constantly being deepened, expanded upon and become new and freshly interpreted. And yes, there’s also the possibility they can become badly translated, diluted and inappropriately used.
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Those who do not want to imitate anything, produce nothing.
-Salvador Dalí
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Secondly, a few months ago I started to occasionally come up with, and post on fb and in my posts here on TME, my own original quotes. I still do. Because I believe |EVERYONE| has the brilliance inside themselves to see life in a uniquely profound way and thus come up with original insights and perceptions of their own that are worth sharing. I invited readers to create and post their own quotes to my page. No one did. Granted my fb friends are few; and the invitation is still open. …wink, wink
I will still continue to post mine as inspired; and risk scrutiny, disdain, dismissal, criticisms, jokes, shame and, worst of all … Rejection 🙁
*Spirit guides be with me*
Thirdly, I personally would love to have the opportunity to sit down with any of these old fogeys and chat. Da Vinci, Einstein, Watts, O’Keeffe, Rumi …the list is endless. At least I have the words they have written, or that others have translated and documented about them. Vacuous, meaningless pablum my ass – and, you can quote me on that!
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#2. Many authors are misquoted and receive either incorrect or no accreditation.
Response: True enough. Anyone of us can be lazy, and make mistakes; sometimes even on purpose! Out of respect, the onus is on us to research and validate the authenticity/accuracy of the quote before posting. I do wonder if the legitimate author would be all that upset? Which is more important, the fact that someone might be moved, touched or inspired by his/her quote, or that she/he get the credit they deserve. Maybe sometimes receiving the intended message is more important than naming the correct author and an exact, word-for-word, offering? Certainly, receiving both would be ideal and the most respectful.
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All Ideas Are Second-Hand
The kernel, the soul — let us go further and say the substance, the bulk, the actual and valuable material of all human utterances — is plagiarism.
-Mark Twain
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