Thursday, August 25, 2011

Awkward Turtle...

One of the reasons I decided to take sociology as a class this year was because my older friends spoke so highly of it. They said it changes the way we think of the little things in life. Like the things we take for granted, or the things we don't pay attention to.

I'd definitely say that walking into class and sitting there in complete silence was so incredibly awkward. Every year on the first day of school, especially since high school began, you sit in class, the teacher talks, we listen and stay quiet until asked any questions. I guess that's how we've been trained sociologically. Like we as students have been brainwashed since the beginning of school to be quiet until spoken to. That's how classes always begin. So when I was in an environment where we didn't yet know the teacher, or what we were supposed to be doing, or even if we were supposed to be talking, the room was filled with awkwardness.

 Even if the class wasn't silent and we were talking, I still think we'd be talking just to fill the room with noise. Small talk. That's what people do on the first day of school: "How was your summer?" or "Are you excited for this year?" Students talk just to pass time and fill the silence in the air, so I think silence is something we take for granted. I like silence...even though on the first day of school it was such a weird situation at first!

Silence alone isn't awkward if you don't feel pressured to talk. I think that people make situations awkward. I don't even like the word awkward. I think that people make situations feel strange and uncomfortable so we feel pressured to talk. I never really thought about how we we were stuck in this routine for the first day of each class, but this silence taught me that we've already been trained to follow routine and we didn't even know it.


1 comment:

  1. Hi Dylan,

    Glad you heard that about the class. I think that it can be how you described if you are willing to commit to the class. Yes!! People make situations awkward. That is the point! That's what sociology will examine - how people shape situations.

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