onsdag 21 juli 2010

- 1 -

Has bigger spaces made us into smaller people?


As I mentioned in my earlier blog-post, I’ve observed people basically my entire life. From being the shy girl in the corner to being the outspoken and curious one asking people in my surroundings for their view on the subject.
There are so many different answers to the question to why people are interacting with one another in the way we are, and what we can do to change it, anything ranging from psychology to that the mothers are now working outside of the home.
What I have chosen to do is to focus on the home itself, still bearing in mind that roles have changed, both when it comes to the children’s role in the family, to the way apartment and houses are laid out.

The fact is that there has been a tipping point when it comes to how the basic family is constructed (taking Denmark as my main example), and that tipping point arrived some time last year (2009).  The family structure has shifted from being a majority of couple-families to being single-families, in other words, from living with a partner and your child/children, to living alone with your child/children. What has made this change I’m not going to go into, it’s way to big of a subject for me to get my head around without studying it thoroughly.


After making a mind map about the subject of how our living conditions, and how it reflects on how we interact with the people around us, a couple of month ago I divided it into different categories, focusing on how we use our homes today.

Seeing that there’s not specific order I will just pull one out when i feel like it, without regarding what has been written before hand.  Everything as an influence on everything, so the order goes round and about.

Since viewing this subject in a historical perspective, many different aspects of it have arisen, but mainly how our homes affect our family dynamics. Thus I will below highlight the historical changes in society that has lead to the modern family structure and how our modern homes not only are an image of this but also a major factor in defining us as individuals as part of the complex constellation called families.


THE BIG SPACE

My grandmother was 1 of 12 siblings. Growing up on the countryside they didn’t have much space, so they had to share the space they had, including rooms and beds.
My mother spent her summer with her 3 siblings on an airfield where her father worked. During this time she and her 2 sisters had one small room, her parents slept in the kitchen while her brother had his own room.
My siblings and I are so far apart in age, and from different couple constellations that we hardly ever spent more than a day or two under the same roof, so sharing a room, not to mention a bed with any of them just hasn’t been the case.

3 generations, and 3 very different ways of growing up.
My generation and I basically all had our own rooms, even from a rather young age. Many of my friends had their own TV with different games to go with it. That wasn’t the case in my family since my parents were against TV, and very much for the kitchen.
I know that this has influenced me in many ways. The kitchen is and has always been the heart of our home, a place not just to eat, but also where the homework was done and the big discussions were held.

Now I wonder, this big private space that is given to people right from the beginning, how is that influencing the way we interact with others?

Have these big private spaces had an impact on our tolerance and respect toward family, friends and strangers?
My answer to that question is YES! I believe bigger private spaces leads to less interaction with others, which leads to less confrontations, which leads to lesser capability to but yourself in someone else’s shoes, which in turn leads to less tolerance and respect for others.

I believe that one way to change that is to make the bedrooms into just that, bed rooms, a place to sleep and get away if you need a little time for yourself, but not a place to disappear or hide from the world while watching TV or playing computer games.
If we make the kitchen a more social and usable area, I believe that is a good start for changing people’s mindsets, and thereby the way they interact.

People who’ve grown up in big families or just in more clustered (talking about people here, not stuff) seem to be better at finding quiet time even when surrounded by people.  So I believe it’s all about habits, and the habits we are taking on right now are taking us in the wrong direction.

3 weeks in into the vacation...

... and I've started to wonder what job I can find in such a short notice, cause i'm starting to get oh so bored around here.

My job for the summer, here at home, has been cooking and cleaning out the garage. It might sound like small tasks but my mom has a tendency to invite all the family friends while i'm home, so there is always a lot of action in the kitchen during these periods, and the garage was such a mess when I arrived that one had to jump over sideways if one even wanted to enter. Right now one still has to jump side-ways, but not as high as before...

So, what can I possibly do to gather some cash around here? Anyone who wants their house repainted, anyone who want's a new website. anyone who needs a hobby-chef?

I do have some things to do, finishing of the garage for one thing, but I would love to learn more about flash and archicad, and then continue writing on 'Live and interact'

Oh well, one thing at a time... I'm just no good at that, I prefer 2-4 things at a time...

onsdag 14 juli 2010

- ? -

How? What? When?

I remember specially one boy, the son to some friends of the family. He was spoiled, he was the only child from his moms first marriage, got what he wanted, when he wanted. That should not have been much of a problem, I knew more kids who were spoiled due to rich parents, but there was something special about this particular boy. He was rude, he never wanted to chair his things, but wanted to use everyone elses without even questioning. I never thought about it then, or maybe I did but used different terms for it, but I believe that what he was missing was a true home.
Sure, he grew up in a big nice house, but everything felt like a magazine add. His room was as perfect and tidy as the living room and dinner area. It had a big bed, a big tv, and a modern computer. He was aloud to play almost anywhere, as long as it didn’t leave a trace of any kind and he didn’t disturb the guests.  That didn’t only limit his way of expressing himself, but it also limited his way of interacting with the people around him.

I just remembered this boy and his family today  in the train, on my way home from work in the city. The train was crowded, and in comes a family consisting of 3 young daughters in the age between 4-7, the mother and the grandparents. As fast as they walked in a rose from the seat so that at least one of them had a chance to sit down. To my great surprise I was the only one leaving my seat for this family. Still sitting down were people ranging from 17-50, all of them pretending like they didn’t notice that here were this family of  6 who all looked like they could need a place to rest. The grandfather and I started talking seeing that he was surprised that someone had actually moved to make way. They had been at the ZOO all day, and were just looking forward to getting home to rest their feet, and it was a fact that didn’t chock me the least after even seeing a glimpse of their tired expressions.

That he was surprised, surprised me. Isn’t common humanity to move when you see someone running to catch the train, or rise when you see person in greater need of a place to sit that yourself? Apparently not to everyone!

Not only did it bring me back to the memories of that boy who wouldn’t even consider to do anything for the sort, but it also made me wonder what sort of people who surround me every day, and how this way of interacting have accured.

I doubt that this is a new phenomenon, but that doesn’t mean that today's society don’t have any influence over it. On the contrary, I believe we can change this, if we only figure out the different factors that impact such behavior.

This event fits perfectly in into what I personally find interesting,  how today's family-structure and living-conditions reflect on how individual interact with the people around them.

onsdag 7 juli 2010

now with a 12 and a portfolio

Yesterday around dinnertime i checked my uni-mail and found more then one unopened e-mail. But one that stood out was the one with the headline "Semester grade". I had figured the crit was over average,  but after opening the mail I understood that it was way over average... 12 it said, aka the maximum. It made me so happy that I had problems containing it inside, so I didn't, I ran out on the balcony screaming Yes Yes YEEEEEES while doing a happy dance, shaking my head and hands like a crazy person.

Sure, I've been in-crush with my project most part of the semester, but I was pretty sure that my teacher wasn't, and her word ways pretty heavy, so i thought that i might get a 7, maybe a 10, but i did not expect a 12. So i must have been wrong, she must have liked it non the less, seeing that i managed to get the highest grade for my bachelor. Anyways, Happy Happy HAPPY! Good way to finish off a birthday!

The last few days have been dedicated to the portfolio. Finished it after a bit of hazel, going through the external hard-drives, trying to find Just The Right Pictures and some of the old sketchup files as to be able to do some renders on  them.
So far i don't know how to put up a pdf-file which one can download, but I hope to find a way to do so SOON

Have a wonderful wonderful day
M