stuart wrote:I prefer to try to keep other folks from having to figure everything out the hard way, like I did.
do you not feel your high barrier to entry helped shape you? Do you not feel it has helped to foster a sustainable appreciation of the event? How do you think your attitude/perspective would be different if you were given
someone else's step by step guide? There are an inumerable number of ways to ride the burning man ride. I find a lot of the joy comes in inventing my own.
Good questions. Not really. I feel it was the assistance I received that shaped me more than the barriers that made me require that assistance.
I'd been on my own since I was a teenager, and had to do everything for myself. The closest I had come to being involved in a community was hanging out in a bar 4 nights a week. So for me being somewhere where folks wanted to help me before I was even able to articulate the request was mind-blowing.
Case in point, my first year we did a parachute structure. It, of course, wanted to blow away, and I and others in my camp spent a fair amount of time just holding the damn thing down. the fact that some other strangers walked up to me and just started helping us idiots while they could've been skipping down the playa was amazing to me.
I didn't volunteer until my second year, and it was getting directly involved that gave me a sustainable appreciation for the event. Not being a brilliant artist or hardy construction worker myself, I finally found a way to contribute via the tech teams, then my continued association with the community (incl the Project staff) opened up my creative flow.
As to the question of waht would've happened if I'd have been given someone else's step-by-step guide...well, I was. My campmates gave me checklist and enouraged me to use it. And I followed it. And it kept me from being a total moron but I still learned the hard way that you have to at least revise everything for yourself and that improvisation is almost as important as preparation.
I was also directed to the website, but didn't read much more than the directions. I don't even remember what it looked like in '98. I wasn't receiving the JRS and my campmates & I were almost all newbies and didn't know any better. I didn't know there was anything to know, you know?
So had someone told me "look, you really need to read the whole thing" I probably would have done so and had more of a clue. If someone told me "you should read the whole thing you fucking loser asshole" I probably would not have come at all.
OK to check my own motivations for a minute, upon rereading my reply it's pretty clear why this is an issue for me. I was a desperately lonely person back then and I feel that knowing this community improved my life 500%. I worry that all the newbie-stomping is denying someone else's chance at this.
First there was kindness in the face of cluelessnes, and that kindness inspired me to contribute. Through contribution came community, and my interactions with that community helped me figure out who I am and what I have to offer the world. I have the kind of friends and support that I always dreamed of having, and finally feel cared for. I don't give all that credit to Burning Man, but a chunk of it, certainly.
So maybe my following that first checklist wasn't such a bad thing.