Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Metacognition: Jane Eyre

After reading Jane Eyre, I noticed that most of my attention was focused on Jane's feelings, and how I relate to them. I would find myself criticizing the decisions she made, the things she said, and the way she treated people.

This might have been because I felt a need to understand Jane. First of all, Jane was living in a totally different time period than I am now. At first, I couldn't understand why she had to make things so complicated for herself. I wanted her to choose Rochester from the beginning.

This might have been the easy way out. I've learned from reading this book that the easiest way of doing things is not exactly the best way. When reading, I now know that I need to imagine things from the characters perspective, and not my own.

I also think I read too fast. While reading, I got the main ideas and feelings that were going on. But, I missed a lot of deeper meanings while doing this. I would give myself about an hour or so each night to read the section, but sometimes it wasn't enough, and I would end up skimming the text. Next time I read a book, I'm going to take my time. If I'm going to take the time to read the book, I might as well enjoy it as much as possible.

Another thing I need to do while reading a book is stop and think about what is going on. By going fast, I only allow the quick, "right after reading" thoughts to come. If I stopped after each chapter or important passage, I would definitely benefit. That extra minute would result in reflection and deeper thinking, which is what we are all essentially looking for.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

360 Degrees: "Strip My Mind"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7j-6N6gnIc

Out of all the songs I know by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, this is the one song that, simultaneously, I love and don't understand at all. I decided to try and dissect it as to MAYBE come to terms with what Anthony Kiedis is singing about.

My two favorite parts of this song are the guitar solo and the chorus. "Please don't strip my mind." What exactly does this mean? Who is he even talking to? Is Kiedis talking to God and telling him not to let his memories fade away? Or maybe he doesn't want to be stripped of a certain person that he loves? Is he asking the person he loves to come back to him? When someone refers to "stripping the mind," the first thing that comes to mind is removing all memories away. Maybe he loved this one girl, and he knows that he will never get her back. All he has is the memory of her.

Kiedis also makes a reference to his past. He sings, "Hot as Hades early eighties, sing another song and make me feel like I'm in love again." Something that was once great back in the day has passed in his life. Even after his relationship is all said and done, and years have passed, he is still hung up over this one girl. Why do people find it so hard to move on sometimes? I am curious about what makes a person difficult to get over.

The music working with the lyrics is really what makes this a great song. At some points, quiet in the background, the guitar is whiny. It's like his heart is crying out through the guitar. I especially like the beginning part. He just lets the chords ring out, instead of stopping them. He actually does this throughout the whole song. It creates this effect that we are almost floating. At other times, like during the solo, it's both scratchy, dragged out, and whiny at the same time. Even when the Kiedis isn't singing, there is something else showing us the pain he is going through. Why can't he get over this? Was this girl his first love?

I think it is absolutely amazing when a band can put together lyrics and music and have them mesh perfectly. Every time I listen to this song I hear something new and interesting. Is there ever a limit on different ways to see things? I am curious as to how a person actually creates a song. Which comes first, the lyrics or the music? Can it be both? Which way did this song come?
 
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