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- #121
labels man...
I don't get it.
why do so many people insist on being labeled something?
we insist on being labeled a race, or color, or religion, or nationality....
we pit ourselves against each another. natural light -vs- flash,
lifestyle -vs- formal posing, artist -vs- craftsman...as if all of these things were somehow mutually exclusive.
we willingly segregate ourselves, and then complain that we aren't unified.
just....be. and do. be who you are, and do what you love.
and at the end, when time has made moot the labels choke hold on your soul, and its noose around your neck lifted...Your works and deeds laid bare for history to judge...let those who come after label you, at a time when that label holds no power, no sway over you. and you can be free.
You can't get away from labels because they are a summation of many characteristics that are often difficult to describe in ways that are meaningful.
At the very lowest level, the labels for color (red, blue, etc.) describe characteristics in ways that are not precise but are generally understood.
At a higher less clearly defined level, if someone describes him or herself as a Goldwater Republican, then you can get a general idea of what that person might believe about a variety of fiscal and governmental ideas.
If someone self describes as an artist, I take that to mean that he or she puts more emphasis on the creation of something new, rather than limit him/her self to the copying of work by others - an author rather than a copyist.
Perhaps the best, most generally descriptive yet imprecise label I have ever heard was one used by Fritz Zwicky, an astrophysicist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, who categorized some people as “spherical a______s” (“spherical” because they are a______s no matter which way one looks at them.)