Friday, October 21, 2005

I'm taking a leak.

When my dog takes a leak in the wilderness, he relieves himself and then he kicks out his hind legs in back of him, as if he's ready to take off, but he stays in one place. It appears to be reverse digging. My boyfriend says this is what dogs do when they want to spread their scent around further than where they've peed. They're getting out the message: this is where I stand!

I have been withholding an argumentative post for a few days now because I tell myself that I am no good at arguing effectively. I am a quiet thinker. Not a verbal debater. I internalize arguments until they give me colds, back aches, and general nausea. Even in this virtual reality that I keep, I don't argue. I like to play nice. I disagree, I move on. But right now, I'd like to kick out my hind legs (all Labrador Retriever-like), spread my dirt around, and share with the general wilderness something that is really bothering me. Every piece of pee dirt I fling about matters to me.

Here's the thing. Someone in one of my classes said, "reading comes with responsibility, right?" To put this in context, he was contesting the idea of fine forgiveness at public libraries, namely for young adults, during Teen Read Week (October 16-23rd). To quote him directly, because I can:

"I can't help but ask what this teaches young people? Will they expect an Adult Week where the same happens? Maybe I am making too much out of it, but I think maybe if the fines are over ten dollars, giving them the ability to check out books still while having a payment plan would teach everything. Reading comes with responsibility, right?"

I'm going to graduate school to become, ahem, a librarian. Yes. One of those. (We can talk about how f*ing weird they are later, because that's something I love to do). I took the long way in getting here. I originally wanted to become an urban planner, but then I fell in love with neighborhoods and communities and all I wanted to do for the rest of my life was wander in urban American neighborhoods and write about my experiences. That doesn't have a lot to do with urban planning. Well, it does. But mostly, it doesn't.

I also wanted to teach. And so I did, for two years. Not really traditional teaching, but I was involved in a children's literacy program, and then an Adult Basic Education program. I worked with people from all walks of life that, for whatever reason, couldn't read or had difficulty reading. And that's when my world changed, or, that's what changed my world. I wanted to combine my love for community/neighborhoods/people/literacy/books/information into something and, it turned out that something was actually very precise: a career as a public librarian.

So here I am. I'm a bit different from most of my classmates, or, at least that's how I see it. I don't have the standard arsenal of cat T-shirts, the book snob gene, the academic wit thing, or whatever else. Trust me, there's something about my classmates and I don't feel as though I fit into their box. I just don't know how to describe it. Probably, the best I can do is: we're passionate about different things.

So back to the top. To the statement that a classmate made that reallybothered me. Look. Does reading come with responsibility? Ask yourself why you read. For me, I read for mainly two purposes. The first is always pleasure. I read for pleasure. Secondly, I read to learn things. Is it my responsibility to share what I read? I don't think so. I think this is why anonymity is so sacred in public libraries. On the other hand, using a (public) library may come with responsibility, but even so, am I spending two years in graduate school so that I can come out teaching teenagers about being responsible? No. I am not. I said why I'm in graduate school and why I'm pursuing this career.

If a kid has $20 in fines, he can come to my line. Because he'll leave with books. As a (future) librarian, I would be happy if my books were stolen and never came back. I don't want to keep information. I want to give it away. When you're reading with a child that doesn't have a book to her name or a parent to take her to the library, fines become very unimportant. At least to me. Apparently, I am very radical.

What bothers me the most about his "responsibility" argument, though, is this assumption: "I can't help but ask what this teaches young people? Will they expect an Adult Week where the same happens?" To me, this is the great American warped way of thinking. The trap: Americans assume the worst in their fellow Americans. At least, I am hyper aware of this since living in Florida. Somehow, attracting a teenager back to the library will make them dependent on handouts later in life? Oh, ok.

Give humanity a chance, bro! Open your mind! Stop assuming the worst in people!

I'm pursuing this career because I have compassion for the public. I want to live in a more literate community and country. I don't know if this is why my classmates are pursuing this same career. It worries me.

A lot.

15 comments:

Bobby said...

Love it. And librarians have great blogs, so you're gonna be great.

FRITZ said...

I'm really proud of your rant.

First of all, the only 'responsiblity' we have in reading is using it to the best of our ability--or choosing not to.

Secondly, the literacy rate in this country is fair to middling, but children ARE NOT reading enough. This extends to folks in our age bracket. I don't know how many times people I know (smart people) just DON'T read because "if it's any good, a movie will come out". Reading teaches patience, love of language, confidence, and nourishes our brains. Reading and writing is the backbone of civilization: to put a spoken word on page is the most IMPORTANT thing humans ever did. If that had never happened, none of this blogging thing would have come about, because there would be no technology, no computers, nada.

So, the truth is: WE have a responsiblity to SHARE books and reading. And you know what? I think a forgiveness plan is a terrific idea to get teens to KEEP COMING BACK.

Good rant, Madge. It seems that when you get it out, it's worth reading about.

I tend to rant so much it goes unheard. Thank you for ranting.

☭CRUSH you. said...

I don't like responsibility, books suck and I never remember to return them so they stack up fines for years and years........ they can't seriously expect me to give them back Go Dog Go after all these years? fuck them. The book is mine.

Also reading is important but people read/make too many stupid books, like wtf are you supposed to get out of some shitty 300 page romance novel or a story about aliens coming to earth in 2073 or a bunch of fairies getting their asses kicked by a skeleton army? Story books are only useful when they're concise and to the point, like, for example, Go Dog Go. It's really easy to see the moral there... "dogs like driving cars and live in trees." Versus a book like, for example, Harry Potter. What POSSIBLE use/moral is there for Harry Potter. "I can make up cool words and wear a man-dress!" "magicians come from Canada, eh. or maybe britain. well, where-ever the fuck they come from, you can tell someone's got magic powers if they don't know english right." "even if everyone hates you and you're a fucking loser, there's a secret nerdy society somewhere that thinks you're really cool and will give you a ton of money because your parents are dead" ... yeah. Worthless. And british or canadian or something, which makes it like worthless x2.

It's good to express your opinions. Even if you're horribly wrong and get those opinions shot down, so long as you don't give up and/or you're verbally abusive enough, people will eventually stop correcting you... and that's when you just smother them with verbal/textual debauchery. (Unless of course your opinions are really, ridiculously stupid. Then stfu.)

madge said...

Bobby, thank you. Really, thank you.

Fritz. Thank you! You nailed something that I was leaving out: our responsibility is to share books and our love of reading. That's what I'm in it for. Also, a couple of years ago, I spoke with a professor who did a study on teachers who, in their private time, did read or did not read. Most of them didn't read. Whoa!

Thank you for leaving such a thoughtful comment. You are the best. And a new avatar! I like it.

?CRUSHyou, the infamous ?CRUSHyou. I've seen you somewhere before.

My boyfriend owes $35 to the Balm Peach County Library for a cookbook that's worth, eh, .25 at an overpriced garage sale.

I'm not a Rowling person, but I am a literacy advocate. Many children that I work with want to read something like Harry Potter, so I get to offer them choice.

It's a nice deal.

Have I been crushed? I guess practice makes perfect.

☭CRUSH you. said...

Nahhh, not intended to be particularly crushing, that was my twisted way of saying "your blog looks interesting, keep up the good work."

Meghan said...

yay! the world needs more librarians who're more concerned with getting kids to read, more than getting kids to pay their damn fines. if i remember correctly, at my old high school, when i left, i left about $30 worth of fines for keeping such works as Sula and The Great Gatsby and the librarians only cared about getting their damn money and keeping their web page running. depressing. what's this world coming to?

please work near wherever my future children grow up.

i'm going to go back to the Family Guy Marathon, so if i don't blog for a day or two, it's not because i'm not sleeping (sadly), but rather, because i'm parked in the Hawthorne Lounge watching cartoons. cheers!

---MB


wsyixoj- a cleaning agent so powerful, it can remove cheap hair dye from most shower drains. man, i wish this stuff really existed.

John said...

Nice post.

I agree with you.

I'm not in a long-winded mood....but I wanted to say hi and happy weekend!

J

Meghan said...

happy weekend! i slept in this morning until about 10 minutes ago, when my roomie woke me up. haha. it's all good, seeing as it's 2.45 in the afternoon!

who wants an arsenal of friends like my roomie, anyway? being too scared to be mean definitely has its downsides. although she does have a whole lot of tasty food that she shares...

bah, i'm going to take a nap. hope your saturday is as magically delicious as you are! ah, so cheesy and slightly creepy.. yay for me!

---MB


caruppwj- a member of the Elk family. went extinct because it had the bad habit of leaning too far over the edge of cliffs. beautiful plumage, though...

FICS23 said...

Thanks Madge, Now all i have is mental pictures of dogs marking their territories. On the Library Subject; Good luck finding funding for this. Hey, Defense funding is huge and free, and nessesary, Im sure we can find some funding to pay for "Go dog go" so ?crush you can keep his book without going to jail.

Cheryl said...

You go!! I am so in agreement here. I can't think of anything to add here, but what a great field you're going into, and I love your reasons!

Calzone said...

My mother was a librarian. yep..i'm not going to say anything wierd, just...my mother was a college librarian and has a masters in library sciences.

I feel your librarian pain

madge said...

Meghan (x2): I really do want to be a librarian in Oregon (somewhere). I think my boyfriend may really like Eugene, so if you ever move back there yourself, I just might be a children's librarian there! Hah! I'm too afraid of being mean, too. Downsides -- oh, let me count the ways.

HitmanJ: Put so simply. Thank you.

Fics: The thing of it is, defense spending isn't free! It's costing us quite a bit - I think we may be borrowing from Tunisia at this point. I do see your point, and I may have missed making mine: in the long run, fine forgivness isn't going to cost libraries all that much. But silly policies can sometimes cost a lot of patrons from returning to the library. That's not good!

Cheryl - thank you. I'm very excited to be getting into this profession.

Calzone. Hang on there, dragon. I'm just getting up from the floor. You didn't say anything raunchy and so I was a little startled. Thanks for sharing that tidbit. How I would love to know the Mama Dragon - academic libraries are magical places...

madge said...

And ?Crush, thank you for being oh-so-very-twisted.

kimberlina said...

hrm, late commenter - but i fully agree with you, madge. reading is good. reading is great. reading is sexy. i love a boy that reads.

and i think that kids just don't do it enough these days. (by "it," i mean "read," you sickos.) it makes me sad. even if kids want to read rowlings, it makes me happy because they are reading and i hope that it will extend to other books and authors. you know, like pot is the gateway drug.

btw: i almost became a librarian, too! but the gre scared me. sad, no?

madge said...

Kimberlina, Kimerlina. I think a degree in pharmacology (am I making that up?) would be 10,000x harder to work through than the GRE. If ever you get tired of making mad bank, you should most definitely consider library school...we NEED more of YOU in the profession.

And besides, you have supremely cool eyeglasses.