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Rendahl: Sticky People

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  • Rendahl: Sticky People

    RENDAHL: STICKY PEOPLE
    By: Kristi Rendahl

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2011/06/16/rendahl-sticky-people/
    Thu, Jun 16 2011

    A friend of mine describes many non-Western cultures as being
    "sticky." Sticky people don't recognize arbitrary boundaries of
    personal space. They assume carte blanche to invade, intrude, and
    otherwise insert themselves into any given situation, whether with
    family or a perfect stranger, and everyone expects it. No matter how
    you slice the world-East and West, or North and South-this illustrates
    a profound difference in how people interact.

    Sticky people don't recognize arbitrary boundaries of personal space.

    They assume carte blanche to invade, intrude, and otherwise insert
    themselves into any given situation, whether with family or a perfect
    stranger, and everyone expects it.

    Armenians are a sticky people. Those I know and love, and even
    those I don't, will not silently watch a child misbehave, even if
    it's someone else's child. They will never stop commenting on other
    people's decisions or asking all-too-personal questions. They wouldn't
    even let me go very long with a bad haircut.

    I can thank them for helping me develop a thick skin. It used to
    offend me (more) when people offered frank advice that implied-nay,
    asserted-that I was somehow falling short. Now, I filter most comments
    through the sticky concept lens.

    There is my salon favorite: "Haven't you ever considered waxing your
    eyebrows?" There was the seamstress who remarked while measuring my
    waist, "Nihar es yerevum, bayc ahagin tumblik es" (You look thin,
    but you're actually kind of chubby). And then there is the running
    commentary from day to day on whether one looks fatter or skinnier,
    uglier or prettier, tired or rested.

    No doubt, people are truly concerned about each other's wellbeing.

    I'll never forget the panic in one man's eyes when I sat on a pile
    of cold stones. He ran to my side and grabbed my arm to pull me off
    the pile, saying that it would hurt my "organism" and I wouldn't be
    able to have children. Of course, if you have children, you will be
    on the receiving end of all kinds of unsolicited parenting advice. And
    there is not enough space in this column to describe the never-ending
    rebukes for not having children at all.

    It is as though sticky people are saying, "Hey, we're trying to do
    something here and we need you to conform to the project. If you're
    going to do something different, then you had better seek approval
    from us first." Or maybe they're saying, "We care about you, we want
    you to be the best that you can be, and we can tell you how." Maybe
    they're saying both.

    Shortly after arriving in Armenia in 1997, someone I knew from the
    U.S. remarked about how frustrating he found it that Armenians obsessed
    about their physical appearance even to walk to the village store,
    while in their homes the toilets didn't flush properly. Over time,
    I came to appreciate that pride. Appearance, after all, is one of
    the few things a person has some control over when everything else
    is in a perpetual state of transition. I suppose that's part of the
    reason there is a salon on nearly every block of central Yerevan.

    Most of the time, Armenians appear just as willing to turn a critical
    eye on themselves. They regularly berate themselves for taking too
    much pride in their history and not spending enough time working to
    make the country better today. They bemoan the decline of the quality
    of the education system. They argue that absolutely everyone is engaged
    in some level of corruption and that it will lead to the demise of the
    nation. And they reminisce about how people used to help one another,
    but now think only of themselves.

    Knowing that there is this culture of inward and external critique,
    I have always been surprised by what Armenians turn a blind eye
    to. The classiest camping trip I've been part of was with a group of
    friends in Armenia. Near Garni, we spread a tablecloth on the ground,
    placed proper dish settings for some 15 people, and put out food and
    drink fit for a Cilician king. En route to Yerevan after the outing,
    we passed trash-filled ditches, but no one said a word about it. I
    asked myself, and my companions, how could this exist in the same
    country as gourmet camping?

    It actually angered me when I went to the ski resort one winter and
    saw that the outhouse door hadn't been closed properly before a recent
    storm. A simple bent nail could have kept the door shut. Instead,
    the wind had blown snow inside, and people had defecated on top of
    the snow and ice-covered squat toilet. When you've got to go, you've
    got to go, I guess, but I couldn't believe that the same people who
    dressed in their finest to have coffee with their neighbors, and who
    all but lit candles for a camping picnic, would be able to accept this.

    A friend once explained what he believes are the roots of this
    inconsistency. He said that during the Soviet Union, your home began
    at the front door, and nothing else was your responsibility. There
    was no understanding that your home might also be your building, your
    neighborhood, your city, and your country. The explanation holds water,
    but then what?

    Well, obviously the sticky culture has rubbed off on me since I sit
    here and freely offer my insights when no one in particular has asked
    for them. Go figure.

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