In which H.o.p. visits Club Penguin

H.o.p. learned about the online community for children, Club Penguin. He thought it sounded fun. “Waddle around and make friends!” their promo says. And I’d read a piece about Club Penguin and how some members had raised money for an environmental concern, project, whatever, it sounded like coherent life afoot, plus it’s looked over by Disney and I take that to mean they’re not going to let their players run wild in the streets with creepy internet deviants. Right?

Back in the late 80s, when we lived in an apartment on Euclid near Little Five Points we had some apartment neighbors who were still good inhabitants of hippy world and were doing things like planning on homeschooling their child, which I didn’t understand way back then and thought they were kinda weird, not wanting to send their child to school. Despite the hell I’d experienced in school every second I’d attended, I thought this, because school had reared me to believe that school was an inescapable fact of life and I was still drowsily ensconced in that box. They were also doing attachment parenting which, again, I didn’t understand, I wouldn’t get a clue until I had H.o.p. And even though I now do understand and did what’s called attachment parenting and homeschool, if I was to meet them again, we would still be worlds apart, because though I’d felt they were stranded in the 60s, though I thought they were nice people, devoted to their daughter–and was really kind of glad they were there to carry on the hippy banner in their little one bedroom apartment when so many of the other hippies who’d rescued the neighborhood had become gentrified landholder yuppies–it was fairly obvious they thought I was a rank-and-file member of the drone world, brainwashed as I was by meat. They were vegetarians and if you weren’t an all natural plant fibers vegetarian then they’d talk to you, yes, on the sidewalk, but you were never going to be invited past their door.

Plus there was the Disney conversation.

I’d heard the man was an actor, a very good actor, and I gave him a play of mine to read, hoping he might try out for a role. Which is when, god knows how, we got into a conversation about Disney.

I didn’t like the cartoons as a child and found the extreme fantasy empires of Disney disturbing, so I wasn’t going to mind doing some Disney bashing. The man turned out to believe that Disney was a big plot to finely tune the minds of America into easily malleable mush, the better for THEM to take over. I agreed with him in principle, but then he started talking about the Disney underworld, the streets beneath the streets of Disneyworld, and how mind control gases were released from that lower world, via the street vents. At first I thought he was joking. But he wasn’t, I realized, as he became emphatic and strained. I was smilingly doubtful and said so and that was the end of our sidewalk chats, he pointedly shunned me from then on. He didn’t try out for my play and I never saw him act because it turned out that he hadn’t acted in anything in years because no play met his philosophical standards.

I can appreciate that.

For all I know, Disney is gassing everyone with brainwashing chemicals.

Anyway, here I was today looking at Disney overseeing Club Penguin with moderators and thinking, OK, I’d let H.o.p. run around the virtual community for a while because Disney plus moderators seemed a good combination.

H.o.p. registered and waddled in, eager to be friendly and tell some stories.

Like this…this was one of his stories.

I have a story to tell
about a penguin named Joe
the first penguin to fly!
His wings were too fat to fly so he got an…

At this point H.o.p. stopped and turned to me and said, “I’m going to pause here so everyone can have a sense of suspense.”

Then he went on.

…airplane!
And he went all around the world.

In a place where monosyllabic sponse and response is the rule, the while it takes to relate even a short story is a hazardous risk for the ego.

“Mom, no one’s paying any attention. Why?”

Still, H.o.p. did his monosyllabic best as well (all the while waiting for a prime time to relate The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, as he listened to a podcast of it last night, loves the story, and was eager to try his hand).

“Mom, why is no one paying any attention to me? Why do they keep disappearing like I’m hideous or something.”

I marveled. I wondered. I watched the exchanges of other little penguins. I watched H.o.p. go up and say hi to them and watched them walk off.

Eventually he came upon a group telling scary stories around a virtual campfire. What luck! He listened to theirs and was delighted when he got a chance finally to do a very brief, five sentence summation of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, involving penguins.

“Why’d they all leave? Why won’t they listen to me?” he asked afterward.

It was eerie, because my experience in commenting on other people’s blogs almost always seemed to rouse the same enthusiasm, which is why I largely gave it up a long while back. And I certainly don’t know the magic of making an attractive post that will entice commentary. And Marty jokes that if he makes a comment on a thread on a message board, not only does he not get a response, almost assuredly the conversation tends to shut down.

Internet failures all three of us–H.o.p., Marty and myself.

“Wha up?” another penguin asked H.o.p., sitting next to him.

“The sky!” H.o.p. replied, because he’s loved that joke all summer long and told it every chance he gets.

The other penguin said nothing.

“Why’s he not saying anything?” H.o.p. asked me.

The other penguin got up and left.

“Do you want to be my friend?” H.o.p. said to yet another penguin.

“No,” replied the penguin and disappeared.


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12 responses to “In which H.o.p. visits Club Penguin”

  1. Jim McCulloch Avatar
    Jim McCulloch

    Well, that was a great story about the mind control gases.

    I don’t think the internets are a very good medium for having conversations. Maybe the medium emits a mind control gas that makes the penguins say nothing, or get up and wander off. I dunno.

    You _can_ get people to talk, on the internets, but I don’t recommend it. In a previous internet life, back when usenet newsgroups seemed to the naive (i.e., me) to be a possible way of holding reasonable conversations about important things, I would interject my views about political or social topics on newsgroups devoted to those subjects, and the penguins did not get up and disappear. For example, there was a newsgroup called tx.guns inhabited by gun zealots, and I thought, gee, why not try to reason with these folks? They are not necessarily natural born killers (which is true), so I would introduce friendly doubts about the anti-second amendment mind-control gases emitted by (source of your choice) at which moment they would not clam up and go away. No, they would exhibit many of the symptoms of road rage, which, is a gun zealot, is not necessarily what you want, and become very electronically agitated (I am glad it was only electronic). It was really very difficult to talk to them. They are not friendly people, when faced with disagreement. In fact, they tried to get me fired because they noticed that my email address was a university of texas address (this was before I became a pensioner) and they concluded that I was disagreeing with them on the taxpayer’s dime, on University time. (They were not very good at reading headers.) Anyway, they _claimed_ they ratted me out to my dean, and that I could expect immediate termination (in the lesser sense) as a result. I don’t know whether they did or not: I never heard from the dean.

    Eventually, I gave up and wandered away.

  2. Idyllopus Avatar

    Yes, in the early days of these internets I too hung around some usenet groups but mostly I read.

    Somehow, I never made it around to tx.guns.

    I bet, after you left, they talked about you for quite some time. You may have even become a legend of sorts.

  3. Idyllopus Avatar

    I’ve never quite understood what happens with the internet where people talk about misunderstandings because you’re not within visual range. I mean, the internet was not the genesis of communication via letters. I remember when I used to write letters before it and it never occurred to me to use smiley faces as punctuating reassurance that this was friendly communication. But I didn’t get it when I was 12 or 13 either, as I sat watching friends sign off handwritten notes with things like smiley faces, around the same period that they would begin adopting punctuating their i’s with hearts.

    Anyway, maybe you should have used smiley faces at tx.guns.

  4. Jim McCulloch Avatar
    Jim McCulloch

    I don’t know if I became a legend, but I confess I was kinda pleased, in an unfortunate literary ego-inflation sort of way, when I received what I guess you could call an accolade-in-passing from some guy, in the midst of his tirade against me, when he called me a “silver-tongued devil.” I think he really was serious about the devil part.

  5. ronniepitman Avatar
    ronniepitman

    Reminds me of the scene in Bowling for Columbine, in which Michael Moore joins the NRA, then interviews the NRA’s president, Charlton Heston. The penguin walked away.

  6. nina Avatar
    nina

    I don’t understand what it takes to get people to respond or engage, either. But I feel that way not only about the internet. I feel that way in face-to-face conversations, too. There are exceptions. But mostly I don’t get whatever it is that is involved with talking with other people. I feel as if the penguins walk away from me, too. I try to talk about things that are interesting, that I feel something about, things I think about. And mostly I end up with the idea that I must be talking in some embarrassingly personal way, or going on and on. More and more I find myself not really wanting to talk to people much at all.

  7. ronniepitman Avatar
    ronniepitman

    Keep heart, H.o.p. and nina. Sometimes people are listening even if they don’t respond. And H.o.p., I’m a big fan of your art. I plan to buy one of your shirts tomorrow.

  8. Idyllopus Avatar

    Ronnie, H.o.p. says, “Thank you so much. That’s very nice to say. That lightens me up a lot. I hope you’ll enjoy the t-shirt. Sincerely, H.o.p.”

    And I hope you enjoy it as well. Marty gets stopped nearly every time he wears one of H.o.p.’s shirts, people asking where he got it. Last weekend he was stopped by three separate people in one store.

    The cashiers at Old Navy were all asking where they could buy one.

  9. Idyllopus Avatar

    Nina, you’re a deep person. I mean, it’s obvious the moment someone sees you. “Hmm, deeper than the every day individual.” You obviously listen more intently. You obviously watch more intently. You obviously are more intently engaged with the world. You are obviously measuring, reflecting, meditating on all that goes on about you. Someone asks you a question and it’s obvious that you are giving meaning to their question and considering a meaningful response. The same when you ask a question. You do all this with a great empathy so the last thing on your mind is that you might end up being threatening or off-putting to someone. You are probably one of the more honestly empathetic individuals I’ve ever met. And you’ve got a great and an intelligent sense of humor, too.

    I think of a conversation I had with someone who asked me, since I was a writer, if I thus had to sit alone with myself and think a lot. I said yes and she laughed and said that would frighten her, that she wouldn’t be able to do it. And yet she seemed to me to be deeper than your usual person (and she is) and I thought even that she would bring up the subject within five minutes of my meeting her said quite a bit about her.

    The woman above isn’t an example of this, but I think there are a number of people who may fear that depth. They sense here is a person who has spent a lot of time listening to the very quiet parts of the world and they may fear that person may have a real eye for skrying histories, past or future, in the palm of a hand. They may fear that person can hear the soft backstage whispers even during a performance.

    In stories that kind of seer is usually an individual living on the border of town, out with the birds and talking stones and trees. In stories that seer is usually sought out during an exceptional time in an individual’s life…and by not very many.

    That is a kind of archetype, of course, and so everyone has a bit of that seer in them, which knows a little more than their other parts about the past, present or future. Some have more and some have less of that seer. Some fear that bit of seer within themselves and back away from it, and some fear that seer they may sense in another.

    Like they come upon an especially still pond of water, and if they look at it straight on and too long what might they see. What might that pond find out about them?

    Which may seem odd as what most all people want is to be respected and loved and appreciated. But perhaps what they want to have respected, loved and appreciated they also may fear to be a fabrication, a lie, and worry about a crack through which the authentic self may shine and be discovered by one who is used to looking deeper.

  10. nina Avatar
    nina

    I’m very touched by what you said to me and about me, Juli. Thank you. I think of you as someone with great empathy, a generous and loving heart, interested in people and what they say.

    I think you are probably right, that people are a little afraid of looking deeper into themselves. I think you are also right, that most people want to be loved above all, and respected and appreciated.

    What you wrote here was also reminding me of something my SIL said once. She is almost an architect. I say almost because she did all the course work and then never wrote the dissertation. So for years she’s worked as a kind of highly trained draftsperson, doing a lot of training of others. I remember that she said one time that the most terrifying thing in the world to her was a blank, white sheet of paper. She said this because not surprisingly an architect-in-the-making has to draw things and so some drawing classes are a requirement. Here she was taking all kinds of math classes I’m sure I’d not be able to manage, but she admitted to fearing a blank piece of paper. It seemed to be that there were limitless possibilities, no defined task, that were the things that terrified her about that. I don’t think it was particularly a fear of the mechanics of drawing, just this idea of everything being wide open, all choices were hers to make.

  11. Susan Och Avatar

    As a mom, I think what happens on Club Penguin is that kids who already know each other, but who are not allowed to chat on AOL because they are too young, get together and talk about other people they know. They find it interesting for a while trying to figure out how to manipulate their penguins, but after that there’s not much else to do.

    Maybe there’s more to it, after all you can spend money on that site somehow. We never had any real money left over for a virtual world, so I wouldn’t know. Club Penguin lasted a only a few months as a fascination around here.

  12. Idyllopus Avatar

    Yeah. I did read somewhere that kids would arrange with each other to meet on Club Penguin.

    Certainly won’t be spending any money on it here. I’ve the feeling the fascination will be very short lived. H.o.p. spent hours earning enough CP coins to get a pet Puffle. The rules are that you have to visit the Puffle once an hour when you’re logged on or it might run off. H.o.p. had logged out appropriately but the next day when he returned the Puffle had run off. This didn’t endear Club Penguin to him.

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