Most of the Ten Commandments are antiquated and useless for our modern world/lifestyle. With mass communication and the blending of societies and tradition through globalization, the useful tenants are easily found in any other religion. That being said, there are plenty of anachronous rules in many of humanities traditions. So, with that in mind, I thought it would be interesting to share my take on a set of ideas that are meant to make humanity better. I've chosen to use ten, just like the decalogue Moses brought down with him from Mt. Sinai.
If we as a society believe that posting commandments in public with the purpose of creating a better social well being than those ideas should be universal and modernized. The ancient religious ones would be displayed in a religious setting and the shared secular world could post the list in the manner of Confucianism. In fact, to keep the sacred where it should be, I like to call the ideas as a group the Decca-edicts. Of course, in order for the ideas to remain a lodestar rather than a whip, they're better when considered as "10 suggestions for a better human experience with humanity".
Without further ado, Here they are:
1. Do not do to others what you would not want them to do to you.
2. In all things, strive to cause no harm.
3. Treat the world with honesty, kindness and respect.
4. Do not allow evil to thrive through inaction - Do not tolerate the intolerance of others.
5. Forgive wrongdoing freely admitted, honestly regretted, and fully indemnified.
6. Live life with a sense of joy and wonder.
7. In every moment one should strive to learn and experience. Enlightenment can happen anytime and anywhere. Be Mindful.
8. You cannot know the truth of/in everything. Wisdom is the ability to reshape and/or discard cherished beliefs if they are no longer accurate. Be open to changing what you know as truth in the face of overwhelming and contradictory evidence.
9. Never seek to censor or cut yourself off from dissent; always respect the right of others to disagree with you.
10. Do not guard knowledge or information selfishly. If it is not private, share your knowledge and information with any that seek it from you.
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Sunday, June 22, 2014
Deathray Comics in Logan Was Better Than Any Venue in SLC for Utah's first Live Smodco Podcasts.
When I heard that independent film critic and geek culture
royalty Kevin Smith was bringing his long-time friend and actor Jason Mews to
Utah to record his podcast “Jay and Silent Bob Get Old” in front of a live
audience I was at first excited and then quickly confused. Most people will
assume my confusion was over his choice of venue because he was going to be
recording the show live in Logan Utah at Deathray Comics. Those people would be
wrong. My confusion was all of the madness and upset comments from people who
were confused as to why Kevin Smith wouldn't have chosen Kingsbury Hall or the
Capitol Theatre for such an event. I wondered why those fans thought Deathray
was the wrong place for the event when I thought it was perfect.
Deathray Comics is first and foremost a comic book shop with
a built in stage, lighting and a sound mixer. It is also the hub of geekdom for
the mountain town and home of Utah State University. In addition to those
qualifiers, it’s run by Trent Hunsaker who is co-host of the Smodco podcast
network show “Netheads” and occasional co-host of the “Smorning Show” on the
same Smodco network.
That network is Kevin Smith’s network co-named after Kevin
and his long-time producer Scot Mosier. With those credits being public
knowledge the one last thing going for Deathray comics was that it was an
intimate setting. Kevin Smith hadn’t recorded such a small live podcast since
the Smodco networks burgeoning live podcasts shows began in a small theatre
dubbed the Smodcastle. The Smocastle setting only had about fifty seats. Trent,
his partner of “Rattle Can Heroes” Jonathan Ribera, and Trent’s older brother
along with a pack of loyal and enthusiastic staff managed to pack in nearly 100
seats into Deathray comics.
The seating was comfortable but it was a bit tight. No one
complained though because everyone there was more than happy and appreciative
for the visit from Smith, Muse, and even Trents Netheads co-host and the
Smodcast Networks tech guru Will Wilkins. Although the shop had to be mostly emptied,
comic books lined the walls along with many other signs that this wasn't just
an event in some theatre, this was an event in a theatre crammed into a comic
book shop. The setting for a Kevin Smith event couldn't have been better. The
intimacy and excitement from the crowd confirmed my opinion was shared by
everyone at the event.
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Windows were blocked for a "special" surprise |
The stage was at most 11 rows of tightly packed chairs from
the furthest back corner. Kevin Smith and Jason Mews are also two of the
kindest and warmest celebrities anyone could hope to meet. They’re film-makers
and even to some, heroes, but they come off as real people. Jason Mews wandered
around the front of the building and mingled with the crowd in line to see the
show. He posed for some selfies, took a few pictures for himself, drank a Red
Bull and asked, “Why is this town so quiet? It feels like a ghost town.”
Kevin Smith was patient with audience questions. Some people
rambled and fell over their words but everyone was polite to Kevin and he was
extremely polite and courteous back. He answered every question in a direct
manner and the crowd got the intimate experience the setting of Deathray Comics
promised. The event honestly felt like a conversation with Kevin, Jason, Will
and Trent. It felt that way so much so that people approached the stage, shook
the hands of the podcasters and most even wished Kevin et al a good day to
which Kevin was taken aback. To one audience member he replied, “Wow Man, thank
you. I've never had a Q&A person wish me a good day and thank me after I’d
answered his question. You people in Utah and Logan are really nice.”
Monday, March 17, 2014
Music is my Girlfriend
Geoff shut himself away from the world that is for the world
he’d rather be in. The moment when all of the background slipped away to the
track on his headphones was the first thing he looked forward to every day. The
world of music gave him life where he thought there wasn’t any. All anyone did
was make demands of him. He was going to do things with his life when he was
ready. It’s not like he was just drifting, he had his music and was looking for
a job. Well, he’d made a LinkedIn profile and a Monster account. He was good at
things and no one understood that fact. He would work his butt off but no one really
got him. They certainly didn’t respect him enough to reward him for his hard
work.
For Geoff a paycheck wasn’t enough if it didn’t come with some respect.
Everyone treated him like he owed the world and not the other way around. The funny thing about Geoff though, is that shutting out the
world is what caused his to die. Living in the fantasy of elevated emotion rather
than connecting with those that shared his life resulted in the solitary his
headphones gave him becoming the reality he always wanted it to be. Certainly
the old adage of, “be careful what you wish for,” applied to his escapism, but
so did, “self-fulfilling prophecy.”
Tanya was the last to leave him. She took care of Geoff when
even their mother stopped trying. Tanya could hear the deafening beats bumping
through the bedroom door but knew that hunger and the smell of fresh Mac and
Cheese would eventually lure her brother from his trance. She questioned that
line of thought when the beats from the other room seemed to grow with more
intensity. Realizing there was someone at the door, she flipped off the stove. The
knocking she heard wasn’t part of Geoff’s track and he would eat it cold
anyway. Not much in Tanya’s life was unexpected.
She turned the knob and received a sharp pain to her face
starting from the crushed and bleeding nose and following to the deep emotion
that she was being attacked. She fell on the floor and was violently shoved to
the side by the blurry figure who had bashed her front door into her face. She
tried to cry out for help but the blood was already choking her and she only
made a sad gurgling sound. Tanya furiously wiped at the tears in her eyes, if
she were going to be hurt she wanted to know by whom. She tried to get a good
look but was slapped across the face opposite the hand she was wiping her brow
with. She spun and fell over her left shoulder.
By the grip of the hand suddenly on the back end of her
right calf she could tell her attacker was a man. With too many questions
spinning in her head and not enough answer, the one that kept bubbling to the
top of her thoughts was, “where is Geoff?”
Face down across the kitchen floor, her puffy bloody flesh
made a sickening squeegee like sound as the man continued to drag her past
Geoff’s room and into the nearby bathroom. She kicked on the ground but her thumping
only seemed to synchronize with the beats coming from the other room. Her voice
finally back, she screamed with all her might. It instantly turned to a
shrieking wince as the man’s booted foot crushed her ribs and nearly her spine.
Surely Geoff had to have heard this, but as the shriek turned to a panicked and
desperate cry, she continued to hear only music over her labored breathing.
Her eyes had begun to swell; the blurry figure was just that
and nothing more. She would only ever know the comfort of her love for her
family again as a memory. She held to that memory as the hands grabbed her
roughly by the back of the neck and lifted her into the air. She reached for
the blurry man’s hands but he was so much stronger. He shook her as if to say, “do
not fight me, you cannot win.” He placed her down softly and ran his hands down
her sides. She whimpered at the pain in her chest and did all she could to not
think of what she knew was coming next.
Instead, her attacker dropped her into the tub, or at least
she could only figure it was the tub. Tanya held onto those loving memories. She
pictured Geoff and his beautiful eyes, her mother’s smiling face and felt her father’s
loving embrace. She would have been safe in her thoughts if it weren’t for another
bubble of questioning, “Where was Geoff with his God Damn music?” Other than a
hot pressure against her throat that quickly turned sticky, the thought of Geoff
and his music was Tanya’s last.
Geoff’s eyes opened and his heart rose in his chest. The
house wasn’t just quiet under his headphones, it was muted and comforting. The
smells of food had left and his playlist had ended. He preferred to avoid his
sister. T-Dog didn’t get him and his music and he liked Mac & Cheese cold anyway.
That Mac was calling his name now but he wanted to make sure
to cut short any conversation Tanya might want to make with him. He loaded a
new playlist, Dining Music, and hopped off his bed. He was happy to see the house
lights were off when he opened his bedroom door. That meant Tanya had gone to
bed early. He’d slip into the kitchen, grab the pot off the stove and use the mixing
spoon. He figured he’d have to wash the thing tomorrow and delay another
conversation about house chores. She really did nag him too much but hiding the
dish away now was a good idea considering how sticky the floor was. Tanya was just
going to gripe when she mopped it tomorrow and he’d rather she not have the
dish to complain about too.
“Well” he figured aloud, “If she gets annoying again I’ll just
start up my Conversation Playlist.”
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Mark Avos Blog, an introduction.
I'm going to post some thoughts on here and, hopefully, a weekly chapter to a short story I started back in the days of Myspace. Yes kids, we did have to walk a mile up a steep hill in the snow. We did it while the wind was blowing hard and Facebook was something you did when you fell asleep cramming for finals. Check out my other content any time:
Oh, BTW... did you guess why the name of this Blog is so weird? The hint is in the title!
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