Friday, January 16, 2015

Human Billboards

    "I only quote others to in order the better to express myself" (Montaigne, Selected Essays). In modern society, we seem to have a penchant for becoming walking billboards. That is to say, we seem to have fallen hook, line and sinker for the idea that one is more complete when one can identify him or herself with a famous entity of some sort. Proof, you ask? Answer the following questions yes/no honestly: 1) I own one or more clothing items representing a sports team, 2) I own one or more clothing items with a well-known logo of a product or service on it, 3) I own one or more clothing item with the name of a famous person or group. If you answered yes to at least one of these questions, then you are a (free) walking advertisement for your favorite whatever-it-is.
    It has long interested me that as humans, part of our self-expression tied to our use of language is to communicate our likes and dislikes, our affinity for things by wearing them as a banner for all the world to see. What is it within us, I wonder, that makes us so susceptible to this practice? Are we so desperate to be liked, respected or accepted by others that we feel a need to help the process along? Do we love our favorite brands so much that we want to promote and thereby preserve them? Do we carry a greater sense of belonging within if we proclaim our adoration without? According to the Advertising Specialty Institute, 44% of US consumers own a promotional shirt of some kind. Promotional products bring in 20.5 billion dollars a year, and provide businesses than prime time TV, radio and magazines.
  It is time to stop being the billboard for others, at our own expense, and their profit-making, and regain a sense of identity based on what is truly valuable and long lasting, instead merely what is convenient or cheap. We need to "become" from the inside out instead of the outside in. So here's to individualism and true identity, to finding our "inner selves", and expressing ourselves in ways other than imitation. In the words of Emerson, "Envy is ignorance, imitation is suicide"; in other words, we copy others and follow the crowd at the cost of sacrificing the individual. 
    If you'll excuse me, I need to get ready to go to work in the Student Athlete Building. It's Friday, team support day, so that means I have to go put on my BYU Cougar shirt. I wouldn't want to go against the norm.  :)

2 comments:

  1. That was an interesting blog post. I think we forget that our body language or the way dress is actually a form of communication. We are constantly sending out messages to others around us whether we are aware of it or not. So lets become more aware.

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  2. For just a minute I would like to question the assumption that acting a certain way to feel a part of something is a healthy human practice. One of the natures of man, I believe, is to yearn for belonging. We are born into families, where often this feeling accompanies us, we look for friends, who often times are very similar to us. We do things that make us comfortable and help us feel belonging, which is often a precursor to loving those around you.
    That BYU shirt, for example. You probably don't like every BYU fan out there, but when a person in Lavelle Edwards Stadium and looks out to a sea of blue, hearts swell with pride and love. At least mine does. I feel like I am a part of something great.

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