Friday Free-Write

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Time: 1:26 P.M.

Location: An elementary school in Japan


Friday afternoon. I find myself in a teachers’ room sitting at a desk that faces a map of the neighborhoods surrounding the school. It’s divided into numbered and color-coded districts, from one to twenty-six. Students are gathering in the hallway outside of the office to clean. Their shoes squeak as they walk across the floor, and their voices ring out, some are muffled and echoing in the distance, some are near and clear.

The teachers’ room is mostly empty. The other teachers are scattered throughout the school, overseeing the mixed-grade groups of students as they clean their designated portions of the school, some sweeping, some holding a dustpan, others bent over a wet towel, their hands and the towel touching the floor, running down the length of the hallway.

I, being an employee who is sent to various schools throughout the week, am exempt from this. I could, of course, join in the cleaning, or walk through the halls engaging students and keeping busy, and when I first took this job years ago, that’s what I did do; however, these days, I tend to just hunker down at my desk and work on other things.

When I walked into the school building this morning, I sensed that another week had gone by. I realized this in a way that is hard to word well. I realized it as a sensation that I suddenly felt in my body because I found myself back at the same place that I had been the Friday before this, and the Friday before that, and the Friday before the last Friday before that. Working at different locations on a regular basis does this to you. Rather than process the information mentally (It’s Friday again, so another week has passed.), you begin to make sense of the passage of time physically (Here I am, in my Friday location, so another week has passed.).

I don’t know if other people process the passage of time this way or not. When I was younger, I worked construction for a few years. For stretches of time, I would often go to the same location to work and suddenly that location would change, often to a place that I had never been to before. Sometimes, depending on the weather and the type of work at hand, there would be no continuity at all. I would find myself at a new job site every day, or moving from one familiar place to another throughout the day, delivering lumber here, caulking windows there, picking up tools from one location and bringing them to another. I don’t remember processing the passage of time the same back then. But then I again, I was younger, and I hadn’t yet become a father.

As I get older, I find that time tends to blur into one seamless moment. Each day is the same day, and this day is not linked to the seasons or anything else. I often find myself surprised to see snow outside in the winter, thinking on some level, why is there snow on the ground in summer. Then I take pause for second to recollect what month it is. Oh, that’s right, it’s February. Hmm … that’s strange, why did I have the feeling that it was July?

Tomorrow I will wake up at 4:00 and start the day with a cup of coffee. As I drink coffee, I will do what I do almost every day. I will study French for fifteen minutes. After that, I will work on my latest drawing until it is time to take a shower. After that I will fold the laundry, make breakfast, and wake my family up.

Today I was at my Friday school, so I will know tomorrow that I have more time to spend on my art than usual. On the next day, a part of me will understand that it is Sunday because I didn’t work on the previous day. Then the following day, I will know that two days have passed since I last worked, so I will go to my Monday school, where my body will sense this passage of time in a strangely physical sort of way. And again, though it is no longer Friday, I will have the sensation that another week has passed.



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35 comments
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That's a nice story, I like it. However, I'd like to suggest a writing community for next time, like The Ink Well for example, or Freewriters as OCD community is for topics that don't fit in any other community.

Here's a guide I put together to help you learn about how communities work and why you should use them -> Communities Explained - Newbie Guide. I also put together a list of communities, which is not complete, there are much more communities on Hive, but it will help you get started.

Once you posted your post in the right community, you can then cross post it to OCD community. Here's a guide about cross posting.

Please don't delete any post with the purpose of reposting it in another community as that can be considered abuse. Leave this post here, you'll get it right next time.

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I’ve skimmed through the posts you’ve directed me to, and I have one question that I’d like to confirm. If I tag my post with the names of communities, as I’ve done with this post, does that automatically cross-post what I have written to each of those communities?

I didn’t choose to post this piece of writing to OCD in the way that you have explained in your post. I simply tagged it with the OCD tag, which was common practice years ago when I was posting more actively. Would tagging my pieces with a single community name and then keywords related to the content be a better practice?

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Some communities have distinctive keywords, which used in the post or the tag section will place your post in their community, but not always. I suggest you read my post about communities and you'll understand how to use it.

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Your words:

Where To Post?
You have two options:

You can post on your blog, which means your post wont appear in any community and will be visible to your followers only and by searching for tags.
You can post in a community.

Tags
Tags can have an influence on how many communities your post shows up. This means even if you post in one community, but use another community's tag, your post may show up in the community of which tag you used.

This is why tags should be relevant to the topic of your post and should not be abused. Please don't use tags that have nothing to do with the topic of your post.

The number of tags is limited to 10, but there are dapps, frontends that allow more. >Regardless, it is recommended to stick to 10 and not abuse tags.

I’ve read your posts again. I see, if I tag my post with a certain word, it may be cross-posted into another community, and that may be in violation of that communities rules.

I’m sure you can’t change any of this, but I posted this post on my blog. I didn’t post it to the OCD community. Yes, it seems like it ended up there because I tagged it with OCD. And I had a reason for doing so. It’s original content, and it’s not very specific.

I see there are other communities that are also pretty vague where it could be accepted: cross culture, daily blog, silver bloggers, etc.

The problem I have with this tag system is that many communities are named so generally that if you use a general tag to describe your post, say Education, perhaps, it will apparently get posted in the Education community where it might not actually belong.

Why not make the community tags be community specific? Many communities use the word Hive to distinguish themselves. If I use the DIY tag, it won’t end up in the HiveDIY community (I don’t think). If I use the tag Monochrome, I might be in trouble.

OCD, being its own thing, doesn’t fall into this category of problematic community naming/tagging, but there are a lot of communities that do.

It will be very annoying to me if every time I try to make a post on my blog and tag it with general descriptors (granted I didn’t do that with this post), I get comments saying that I’ve posted in the wrong community and I need to read more literature on how to properly participate on Hive.

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And I had a reason for doing so. It’s original content,

Everything you post on the chain has to be original content, so using the tag for that is not necessary.

OCD, being its own thing, doesn’t fall into this category of problematic community naming/tagging, but there are a lot of communities that do.

OCD, the curation project is focusing on growing niche communities and not on growing the OCD community. I don't know what you are calling problematic communities, but each community has it's own rules, OCD community as well, which has to be respected.

Again, you have more chance to be noticed and your post to get more readers if you post in a relevant niche community.

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Well this is the description at the top of the OCD community page.

Original Content Decentralized is a curation project on Hive focusing on Original Content

That suggests to me that originality (original content) is important to this project.

Regarding problematic communities, I wrote problematic community naming, which is different from problematic communities.

When I want to tag a post with a generic label like monochrome because maybe I have one beautiful monochrome picture in the post, or because I have written a poem that is loosely connected to some aspect of monochrome, and that post, through its tag, gets posted in the monochrome community (without my intention for doing so), and somebody from that community then tells me that I’ve posted in the wrong community and would be better off posting in such and such a community, I consider that problematic.

That’s my two cents anyway.

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Under the description you can find the Rules section, which says:

Try submitting your content to the more appropriate communities before OCD unless you feel it does not belong in any and is original content that works within our rules.

Anyway, I have said what I had to say.

Have a nice day.

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Your free-write brings this song to mind.

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Ohhh … that’s a song that I haven’t heard in a loooong time. Time keeps on slipping, slipping, slipping, into the future.

Yes, it does.

I had a passport picture taken the other day and when they handed it to me, I half-expected to see the face of the twenty-year old me on it.

When I looked at it, I was like, Who the hell is that?🤣

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Everyone I guess is in the same boat. Oh well, as the Japanese say: しょうがないね.

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It’s a one way trip, isn’t it.

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Yes, life is but a Vapor. The majority of ones existence will be in the after life.

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Translate that into Japanese. 😉

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Lol,

What do you think of the Japanese chat forum? I guess I'll put a new one up every other day from now on..

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I like it. I think it’s fun. I’m not sure if I should post my comments like you do, with one in kanji, another all in hiragana, and a third in English, for beginners to follow along, though.

It doesn’t seem like too many people are able to respond in Japanese, but maybe this will awaken a desire to study in a few people.

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Thats what I was thinking. Looks like some nuked the rewards already for a few posts, and someone said it was scammy. My intention is not for the rewards but for practise and fun. I think you know that, but funny others dont see it.

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That’s something that has always bothered me about Steemit/Hive, how straightforward and judgmental people can be about what they are convinced is the right/correct way to use this platform.

It does seem like something that would be more appropriately placed in Discord because it is more of a chat room, but this is supposed to be a social media platform, so why can’t it be done here.

Maybe to placate the people who are so adamant about posts being rewarded their ‘true worth’ and the others who feel like other posts shouldn’t be rewarded more than their own, you could just continue the forum and publish it with the no rewards settings.

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(Edited)

For me, I can throw up some nature shots, add some commentary and Wala, a decent payout and a "respected" post. Put up a chat forum post, and actually spend more time with it than the nature stuff and receive some blowback. Funny. Nonetheless, maybe what I will do is post every other day and see what happens. If you have any suggestions for the chat, and also if you notice any errors in my replies, feel free to point it out if you want. I would appreciate that.

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It’s weird, isn’t it?

I wonder if making it an official community would make it more acceptable. Or a challenge. How do all of those writing prompt posts work?

Maybe posting a short paragraph template that people could complete would allow for more expansion.

私の好きな季節は( )です。なぜというと、( )が( )からです。

With an explanation of key expressions.

I’ll think about it some more.

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I thought about making it into a "community", but I was thinking more of one central place for everyone to comment and even feed off each other's comments, etc.

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If it were a community, could you make a weekly post, pin it to the top of the community page, and then have people comment and chat the way you described above?

That might give it a little more structure.

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Yes, it could be pinned, however people may post into the community instead of feeding off the main post (which isn't necessarily a problem but), going against my original plan which was to have one central post to keep all the comments in one place and thus encouraging a back and forth between interested people creating a synergy of sorts.

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It’s one of those things where, if it were a community, you’d have to outline your expectations clearly in a place that people could easily find.

If it’s working for you now, then I don’t see any need to fix it.

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Another idea, which is a little different from a chat, is to post five kanji every post so that people can follow along and study them. That way it could turn into a study habit for you too.

People who follow along could post pictures of their kanji notebook, or something like that.

You could have beginner kanji, intermediate kanji, and advanced kanji. Or maybe just go through one at a time starting from first grade kanji and moving up.

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Interesting idea. Do you consider yourself advanced or intermediate, just curious? Myself, I used to study heavily some years back, especially when I lived in Japan. Lots of calligraphy (is that what you call it?). I found that really helpful in memorization. Used flash cards too. Recently my interest has been sparked again, after a looooooong break.

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I’m definitely not advanced. I’ve never formally studied the language. I’ve only picked it up piece by piece, one new life experience at a time. I never really know if I’m making mistakes or not, or if I’m communicating like a native speaker or a second-language speaker.

About five or six years ago, I spent a year studying kanji and grammar for the JLPT 2 and passed, but I don’t think I could pass it now. Since then, I haven’t studied at all.

My home, though, is basically an all Japanese language environment, so I’m very conversational, but I’m also very limited by lack of vocabulary and knowledge of expressions, etc.

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You are in a place now where what you learn now is just icing on the cake really. I know some that live in Japan for decades and just never get into the Japanese language thing at all.

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Yeah, that’s weird to me. I feel like those people are often full of complaints about living here, too.

I would love to go to school to actually learn Japanese now, or just go to a trade school and learn the trade in Japanese, studying Japanese as I it fits into the curriculum, but I don’t see that happening in the near future.

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You're writing again :D

Hooray!

I had NO idea you were in Japan! What an amazing and bizarre find. This has raised my curiosity two hundred notches 😁

But I won't pry online...

but this jumps right out for me and maybe bears further thought

 

I could, of course, join in the cleaning, or walk through the halls engaging students and keeping busy, and when I first took this job years ago, that’s what I did do; however, these days, I tend to just hunker down at my desk and work on other things

 
Why?

And if it doesn't fill your soul with joy... well... you know what to do.

In case you aren't around that day... Happy Valentine's day and thank you for being a part of my world 💕

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Thank you.

You didn’t know that I live in Japan? I could have sworn that that had come up at some point in time.

To answer your question, these days I often use that time to work on designs. To be honest, I think the thing got me to start slacking off was Steemit (previous Hive). As soon as I found out I could write and earn crypto, sweeping hallways sort of lost its appeal.

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Nope.

I thought Asia somewhere. I had no idea you were in Japan. But you stopped writing shortly after I found you for a while so...

I'm so interested in Japanese culture... and the country.

Ah... I get this too (the finding new interests).

Perhaps you called it in and you only need to now combine skill sets to make it work for you? I mean... a tech class at schools as an extra mural could work? Or a creative writing club?

I also isolate at times, for the creative process... but I also find I get so much material and inspiration when I engage with other people... it's a balancing act. Inspiration / integration.

But I used to isolate for the wrong reasons at times and that's not good.

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It’s funny. I never had any interest in Japan. I just ended up getting a job here and so I came for what I thought would be one year. Thirteen years later and here I am, at home.

What made me want to write again was journal entry that I heard read aloud the other day in the midst of a documentary about the band Morphine. I’m often only the slightest nudge away from writing and posting, but since I’ve got other things that I’m constantly working on, without that extra bit of inspiration, I let it slide for long periods of time.

You’re right about combining skill sets. I’m getting closer to finding the right way to do that, but I haven’t quite figured it out yet.

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Good to see another of your writings. Good to know you are still alive!

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Alive and thriving in the winter and snow. Bring me more. I love it! 😁

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