Mythos & Marginalia

life notes between the lines and along the edges


  • A Despicable Duplicitous Act

    It’s popular, and it’s alarming.
       Plagiarism has become a bigger problem than ever, and more apparent as social media further casts its spell across every platform and screen. Instagram, Facebook, and Pinterest are all full of bright shiny examples; you see it all the time.
       It’s out there. It is trending.
       A disturbing, disrespectful act, plagiarism is stealing, passing off the ideas or words of another person as one’s own. Examples lack credit or attribution.
       I’ve called out a couple of people over the past few months for blatant
    misuse of quotes belonging to someone else.
       One person, a couple of times on her social media feeds, matched lovely quotes (including one by T.S. Eliot) with beautiful black and white photographs of herself. The combination looked great, but nowhere was the poet credited with the original genius.
       Another influencer — in a stylized format featuring her name and image — used the words of a popular motivational speaker. An earlier post, in the same branded format, featured a paraphrased quote by Toni Morrison.
       The Instagram post was made to look like the influencer was the one offering up such compelling advice.
       It was so wrong.
       I sent a comment to the owner of the post (but not the words), informing her the quote belonged to someone else. “It’s great to be inspired, but share the credit,” I said.
       She quickly responded: “I had no clue it was him as it’s just a widely shared quote without his name.”
       See, that’s the problem; nobody does the research. Nobody takes the time to find the source of their inspiration. Nobody bothers.
       It’s sad because the same device used to create the post has the capability to trace the source of the statement. A Google search is so easy.
       Attribution is important. Behind every quotable quote is a writer, an artist or musician, politician or fortune cookie philosopher who laboured over the correct phrasing or came to them in a flash of brilliance.
       They deserve the credit for the deep thought or clever observation. But, these days, they don’t get it.
       Now, I’m not saying that the people I called out are not capable of such profound thought, but it seems they don’t even try. One of them, by simply taking a phrase that has already made its rounds on the Internet, shows how little she was trying to come up with eye-catching content.
       It’s really too bad.
       Plagiarism is a despicable, duplicitous act. It is ethically wrong, morally reprehensible, spiritually bankrupt, and grounds for dismissal in the halls of academia. It should be a source of shame to anyone who seriously commits such a tasteless endeavor.
       Plagiarism is fraudulent, leaves little to the imagination, and corrupts the concept of free thought. No matter how brave and bold the original work was, it becomes empty of its meaning when it is bastardized.
       I’m not saying that every time you plagiarize a kitten dies, or another COVID-19 variant is released unto the world, for it is more serious than that.  Each time you claim the words of others as your own; you dilute the original message of a fellow human being. At the same time, you weaken your own content.
       Be creative. If there is a point you are trying to make, or you are attempting to inspire or provide insight, use your own words (or give credit where credit is due).
       If you chose to pass along an inspiring quote, be inspired yes, but provide attribution (and don’t just hide it deep down in your content).
       Show you know who said it.
       Show you know what you are talking about.
       Show that creativity is more than a pretty picture and a few happy words.  Show the true worth of the words.
       You’ll feel better about it.
       Believe in yourself, and others will believe it too.
       Be authentic.
       Be you.

    © 2021 j.g. lewis

  • We Only Think We Remember

    Costs of living intently rising with greater momentum
    than we have experienced in decades. Inflation. A dollar
    eroding, daily, hourly, overnight as markets contract or
    give way to pressures we have not known; for a while.

    Geo-political influences, war we cannot ignore, news
    streaming 24 hours a day. It is the way we live. Digitally.
    Death toll accumulates; we have been watching the
    numbers climb for well over two years now. This virus.

    Pandemic focused our psyche on the ebb and flow of
    what little we know. Climate change we once ignored,
    heat or rain in amounts we have not seen before, in areas
    once plagued by drought. We only think we remember.

    The earth is changing, and we with it. How can we not?
    Efforts all for nothing, we take stock of what we have and
    all we have lost. We feel a deficit, financially and morally.
    We contemplate circumstances never before considered.

    Money is more than our own concern; and concerned
    we must be. Drastic shifts of the dollar; our wallet not as
    bulky as it once was. Common cents. Pump prices rise,
    daily, to record levels. It will again, the costs of this pain.

    So much has been misplaced, most of all this sense of
    community. Look around. Do you see the abundance of
    friends and colleagues we used to know? How did they go?
    How can we afford to sustain the inevitable unavoidable?

    © 2022 j.g. lewis

  • Meaning Comes With Age

       Summer doesn’t speak;
    it whispers a conscious melody
    to high-heeled fashionistas with open toes,
    sunburnt brats with runny noses, and
    old men who know
    evening air is sweeter
    when dusk has had its way.      Humidity.
    Sweat of the glass,
                                     Tangueray and tonic
    will take away the pain,
    Mosquito bites, lonely nights
    sitting on an ever- creaky veranda,
    Dinah Washington crackles from the speaker.
    Suddenly you appear. . .
       Any other day
    flowers stand taller, like
    the younger women strolling by,
    getting younger by the day.
    Watch them
                        and wipe
    the perspiration from your brow;
    the once-crisp handkerchief has
    soaked up many nights of lustful thoughts.
    Old men just grow older,
    the meaning comes with age.     Humility.
    Summer lasts as long
    as a savings account wastefully spent.
    Then you are gone. . .
       Over time
    most of the flowers will perish
    well before first frost,
    mostly from neglect.     Naturally.
    We will all grow tired
    of looking at them,
                             or forget the beauty.
    Our minds go to other places.
    Yet summer, in its capricious wisdom,
    will breathe again
    to those of us who will listen.
    To young women
    and older men.

    © 2018 j.g. lewis

    Watercolour painting by Kevi Remple

    *selected lyrics from Invitation.
    Written by Bronislaw Kaper/Paul Francis Webster,
    the jazz standard was memorably recorded
    by Dinah Washington in 1962. Has desire ever
    been captured more sensually in a musical state?

     

  • Affinity

    We take all dreams with a grain of salt.
    Emotions take a licking, worse for wear,
    bruises bear witness to the challenge
    of friendship.      At any age,
    infatuation infects common courtesy,
    unknown among misfits and hangers-on,
    in the desire to be together.
         You are among friends.
    Among thieves, even casual acquaintances,
    honestly it is difficult to see the honesty
    apparent in our everyday strife.
         But it is worth looking for.      Affinity.
         Fragile masculinity, genuine femininity,
         no distinction, no distractions, imitation
    knows no limitation, Humans being human, as
    tricky as it is, as finicky as it was, we all
    want to belong, It is the people in our lives
                        that make our lives worthwhile.

    © 2022 j.g. lewis

  • We Wait

    Undetermined hesitancy,
    well past procrastination, yet far less than wasting time.
    Waiting is less a function and more of a state.
    It is not stillness; for that to occur the mind must settle, not
    impervious, but free to allow thoughts in. And out.
    Then become silence.
    We, then, are waiting, knowing time will tick on anyway.
    If we can stop even for a moment, to simply breathe,
    we can find perspective.
    It is searching for something meaningful
    from something meaningless.
    We seek further meaning,
    knowing our lives are deeper than our pockets.
    We understand there is greater nutrition in a shared meal,
    that Friday will arrive each week, and a bicycle and a car
    each have a purpose.
    We wait; believing home has nothing to do with boundaries.
    For our past to catch up with our ever-present worry, for
    today to be the gift we were told it would be,
    the future must unfold as it should.
    In searching for this equilibrium,
    have we become stuck in the balance?
    Our mind is occupied.
    Waiting.
    We know there are people, who miss us as we miss them,
    and we wait in one space thinking that one person may find us.
    Waiting may be a reminder
    they are not coming.
    As we wait, we attempt to determine if
    our response is an action, or a reaction.
    We know inaction.

    © 2019 j.g. lewis