Generosity
Jul. 30th, 2015 09:00 pmPretty sure LJ is mostly dead, which makes this a safe corner of the internet to ramble to a limited audience...
I've been thinking about generosity, lately, and reciprocity. I've been the recipient of what feels to me extraordinary generosity in terms of people's time, and their interest, and even financially: people have bought me lunch, or occasionally drinks, or given me gifts - a book, or sometimes money - or let me sleep in their spare room/on their futon and fed me in their homes.
And once upon a time - ten years ago, give or take - I would've insisted on refusing their generosity. Because I cannot repay it in kind. And even now, accepting it makes me uneasy on so many levels - am I taking advantage? Am I sponging? Am I a parasite? What are the ethics of accepting kindness from friends?
I suppose I worry about reciprocity more, lately, than usual, because of the peculiar desert of the looking-for-work. I have enough brain to worry, as I didn't in the last months of my PhD. But hardly any income, and lately I begin to worry exceedingly over the prospects of coming by some in a more regular way. And so I am appalling grateful for generosity, because it is by generosity that I feel less trapped - while at the same time having no idea when or even if reciprocity will be possible.
It is a strange feeling. I am not entirely sure I am not mad.
I've been thinking about generosity, lately, and reciprocity. I've been the recipient of what feels to me extraordinary generosity in terms of people's time, and their interest, and even financially: people have bought me lunch, or occasionally drinks, or given me gifts - a book, or sometimes money - or let me sleep in their spare room/on their futon and fed me in their homes.
And once upon a time - ten years ago, give or take - I would've insisted on refusing their generosity. Because I cannot repay it in kind. And even now, accepting it makes me uneasy on so many levels - am I taking advantage? Am I sponging? Am I a parasite? What are the ethics of accepting kindness from friends?
I suppose I worry about reciprocity more, lately, than usual, because of the peculiar desert of the looking-for-work. I have enough brain to worry, as I didn't in the last months of my PhD. But hardly any income, and lately I begin to worry exceedingly over the prospects of coming by some in a more regular way. And so I am appalling grateful for generosity, because it is by generosity that I feel less trapped - while at the same time having no idea when or even if reciprocity will be possible.
It is a strange feeling. I am not entirely sure I am not mad.
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Date: 2015-07-31 09:19 pm (UTC)You're not accepting gifts that are greater than the giver can afford. A few nights on the sofa and an extra plate of food are, to most people, pretty much nothing, and more than balanced by the chance to catch up and talk. It's really difficult to train oneself to think like this when one has no money (and I struggle with this, because when you have no money making only necessary purchases, with the occasional small necessary-for-mental-health purchase is sensible and good practice), but for people with a reasonable income - even if it's not great - there's a certain amount of wriggle room in the budget which can best be summed up as 'entertainment budget'.
I'm trying to think of that as fleeting, whatever it is, because that's better for my mental health. So whether I have a takeaway, or go to the cinema, or buy a book, or buy an online resource, I all treat it as 'I spent £10 and I was entertained and now it is gone'. And in some cases I have the book to hold onto (or not), but I see all of these as 'buying a good time'.
Seeing friends enjoy themselves totally counts as 'buying a good time'. Knowing that friends can buy groceries, or just get a break from the relentless jobhunt *is* a good use of my money, and not just because I've been there on the other side.
If I have a motto, it's 'if you can't return a favour, pass it on.' There'll be plenty of opportunities where you can do something for other people.
It'll all balance out, and in the meantime, the world is a better place. And if you ever need crash space in London, please holler. We're far off the beaten track in a boring part of London, but I'd love to finally meet up.
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Date: 2015-08-01 04:56 pm (UTC)It's just really weird. Really weird.
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Date: 2015-07-31 12:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-07-31 02:51 am (UTC)*wanders back into the shadows of LJ, gibbering softly*
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Date: 2015-07-31 03:03 am (UTC)In other comments, I kind of hope lj is not utterly dead.
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Date: 2015-07-31 03:12 am (UTC)When I was in grad school and had to be tight-fisted with spending money, I cut way back on socializing that involved money. But I also learned to graciously allow my friends to do what they chose in order to spend time with me. Now that the wheel has turned, I'm always grateful when people who are not as well-situated as I am (and especially when due to things like school, or job-hunting) allow me to enjoy the pleasure of their company without having to worry about whether I'm straining their resources. And without making me feel bad about being able to do so. When I am able to offer hospitality in a way that costs me nothing and yet makes the path smooth for a traveller, there is no exchange, only increase.
Money is far from the only resource people have to share around. The number of people who are creating interesting, entertaining content online is much smaller than the number of people who are consuming that content. A person who has knowledge and expertise can share it out with relatively little cost…to people who would not be able to obtain it otherwise at any price. The ability to make connections -- between people, between ideas -- is another uncommon resource.
And Liz, I know it's going to embarrass you for me to say it, but there is a small handful of people in the world from whom I see *something* blazing out like the light of a thousand stars. You are one of those people. To be afforded the opportunity to experience those Shining Stars is beyond anything I could ever repay. And I doubt that I'm the only person to whom you are stella splendens. Be yourself, as you can, when you can, to whom you can, and there is no debt.
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Date: 2015-07-31 10:41 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-07-31 11:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-07-31 11:52 am (UTC)Anyway.
*waves as you disappear into the shadows*
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Date: 2015-07-31 11:59 am (UTC)Anyway.
(I also hope that LJ is not completely dead, but it does seem to keep getting quieter.)
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Date: 2015-07-31 03:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-07-31 03:53 pm (UTC)*is embarrassed* *also flattered and warmed*
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Date: 2015-08-01 01:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-08-01 03:51 am (UTC)But if it helps: people are remarkably good about happening to have their attention elsewhere when there are pleas for help that they don't want to respond to. So if people offer generosity, it's because it pleases them to do so. There are vast numbers of other people out there complaining about things who get no response.
That is, of course, a problem in the world. "Worthiness" doesn't have much to do with who gets helped and who doesn't. (There are aspects of the culture of crowd-funded charity that I find greatly disturbing.) But maybe you don't *have* to be worthy? Maybe people are allowed to be whimsical and idiosyncratic in how they open their hands to the word?
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Date: 2015-08-01 06:08 pm (UTC)Anyway. Brains. Social interactions. Anxiety. Living-in-the-world. Complex!
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Date: 2015-08-05 12:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-08-05 09:18 am (UTC)