Not that I am particularly proud to admit this, nor does this reflect highly upon the quality or the quantity of my social endeavors, a significant percentage of the my daily 24 hours used to dissipate in the form of bits and bytes, and recently having acquired (by way of actually puncturing that financial envelop, I live in), a notebook, that percentage is almost all set to hit the one hundred mark. Anyway, some where in this entire cycle of existence, I was introduced to a screen saver that apart from its brilliant visual content – was thoroughly complemented by some very meaningful and fitting lines. And one such was – “It’s not what you look, it’s what you see”.
Apart from the fact that the statement in itself was very simple and appealing, what lead me to this entry on this blog was – “how many such explanations we encounter in our daily lives and how many we tend to ignore. The beauty of language is that (I am sure my linguistic friend will have a field day skinning me on this), it provides a medium that we are free to extrapolate, and mutilate to suit our requirement and convenience. However, what is equally brilliant (in it’s variety) is the width of the spectrum of human interpretation of what may seem to be identical statements.
Something towards this cropped up recently, during my conversation with a friend of mine (who is visually and intellectually superior than I am), and I suspect that he might have mistook my genuine attempts to express my “surprise” as my condescension and THAT matters to me (more about what happened – some other time).
3 comments:
Your linguist friend has no "bone to pick" with the fact that language is half what is said and half what is heard, read, or otherwise understood. In actuality I don't know the proper percentages belonging to the two sides of a communication, but certainly a communicative act, a piece of language, is only communicative once recieved and thus interpreted. Speaking can happen in an empty room, but communication is dependant upon an interlocutor, an audience, and his or her reception and interpretation.
Couldn't agree more (typically unusual you might say coming from me), but one adddendum to your last line, if I may is that ...it's also dependent upon the degree of reception.
Misunderstandings, like the misinterpretations that occur so often, even between friends, truly can mess up friendships in a hurry. What one thinks was said, may have little or nothing to do with the communicative intent or heart of the communicator. Something to keep in mind as we listen...
Post a Comment