#braidedprairie — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #braidedprairie, aggregated by home.social.
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Memory in the Meme
We live in an age of disposable context. We scroll through the infinite ribbon of the glass screen, pausing only for a microsecond to register a flicker of recognition before sliding our thumb upward, condemning the moment to the digital abyss. We have been trained by the Technocrats, those right-brained architects of our algorithmic prisons, to view this behavior as consumption. They tell us we are “consuming content.” But they are wrong. When we pause on a meme, that pixelated artifact of cultural shorthand, we are not consuming. We are remembering.
The meme is often dismissed by the serious-minded as the detritus of a distracted generation. It is seen as a low-resolution joke, a lazy way to communicate a thought that should have been an essay. But as someone who has spent a lifetime studying the intersection of the “Human Meme” and the hard realities of communication, from the stageboards of Broadway to the silent, proximal grammar of American Sign Language, I tell you that the meme is something far more curious. It is a vessel of containment. It is the modern amber in which we trap the mosquito of our collective emotion, preserving the DNA of a specific moment in time that would otherwise evaporate into the ether of the forgotten.
Consider the “visual vernacular” of the internet. In American Sign Language, we talk about the power of the classifier—a handshape that represents a class of objects, moving through space to tell a story that words cannot capture. The meme operates on this same frequency. It is a classifier for the soul. When you share an image of a skeleton sitting on a park bench waiting for a reply, you are not just making a joke about patience. You are transmitting a complex, heavy emotional state—the specific, crushing weight of being ignored—without uttering a syllable. You are using a shared visual language to contain a feeling that is too large and too messy to be constrained by the rigid geometry of the English alphabet.
There is a “braided prairie” quality to this phenomenon. Growing up in Nebraska, I learned that the land remembers everything. The wind that cuts through the tall grass carries the same dust that settled on the pioneers. The meme is our digital prairie. It is a vast, open space where millions of individual blades of grass, our individual anxieties, our triumphs, our absurdities, weave together to form a cohesive landscape. When a meme goes viral, it is not because it is clever. It is because it has tapped into the groundwater of that prairie. It has found a common root. It allows us to stand in the middle of the digital nowhere and say, “I am not alone in this feeling. You are here, too.”
This is the function of memory in the meme: it fights the “cultural instinct to forget.” The machine wants us to forget. The algorithm prioritizes the new, the fresh, the “trending.” It wants us to be in a constant state of forward motion because a person who stops to remember is a person who stops clicking ads. But the meme acts as a brake. It is an anchor. It drags the past, a screenshot from a 1999 cartoon, a blurry photo from a 2012 news broadcast, into the present and forces us to reckon with it. It creates a loop of “static time,” freezing a reaction in perpetuity.
I have written before about the tragedy of the “Original Cast Recording”—how it captures a living, breathing theatrical performance and freezes it into a definitive, unchangeable document. The meme does something similar, but with a crucial difference. The cast recording demands you listen to it as it was; the meme invites you to remix it as you are. It is a living archive. It allows us to take the memory of the past and overlay it with the context of the present. It is a collaboration between the dead (the original context) and the living (the current caption).
However, we must be wary of the container itself. We are building our “palace of memory” on rented land. We entrust our cultural heritage to platforms that view our memories as data points to be mined, not treasures to be kept. We are facing a crisis of digital preservation. The “Link Rot” of the web is real. The servers will eventually be wiped. The Technocrats will pull the plug when the storage costs outweigh the ad revenue. And when that happens, what becomes of the memory?
This is why the act of sharing a meme is, in itself, an act of defiance. It is a way of keeping the signal alive. We are the “Human Meme.” We are the biological substrate that keeps these ideas breathing. When you save a meme to your phone, you are acting as an archivist. You are curating the museum of your own existence. You are saying that this specific collision of image and text, this specific containment of irony and truth, matters enough to be saved from the flow.
We must not mistake the trivial for the temporary. A joke can last a thousand years if it touches a truth that the history books are too polite to record. The meme is the folklore of the future. It is the cave painting of the twenty-first century, scratched not into stone, but into the liquid light of the screen. It proves we were here. It proves we saw the absurdity of the world, the horror and the beauty of it, and instead of screaming into the void, we chose to contain it. We chose to frame it. And we chose to share it.
So, the next time you hesitate to post that silly image, remember the weight of what you are doing. You are not just adding noise to the signal. You are preserving the hum of the human condition. You are ensuring that the memory survives the moment. You are telling the future that we were complex, and we were funny, and we were here.
#asl #braidedPrairie #culture #humanMeme #learning #machines #meme #memory #signLanguage #technocrats #thinking -
When I returned to North Loup, Nebraska this summer to bury my mother, I realized I hadn’t been back to that beautiful village for 40 years! It seemed impossible that I’d been away from the braided prairie for two generations! I discovered the last time I visited North Loup was in 1984 when I published a photo memory. Today, 14,600 days later, I present a new photo memory of the North Loup that raised me, and that lifted all the hopes of my curious childhood in far away in Lincoln, Nebraska.
Popcorn is big in North Loup. There’s a popcorn factory that employs many of the residents and the yearly, century old, Popcorn Days celebration is still crowning Popcorn Queens!
The residue of the popped delight is a year-round mark of pride, and belonging, in the small village of 221 people. 40 years ago, 400 people lived in North Loup. Everything decays. Time. People. Populations. Popcorn!
One big change for me to see was seeing the new water tower.
The old tower looked like a silver, shining coffee pot percolating in the sun — this newfangled version looks like a turkey baster!
North Loup doesn’t really have addresses.
You just sort of point a person to a destination in town, or you gradually walk them through a — “turn right, then left, carry on straight a bit, there” — pathway pocked with recognizable landmarks.
There are, however, some homemade street signs for those who want navigable names along with directions.
Some of the places I remember from 40 years ago are still standing — they may no longer be there — but they are still standing; like this gas station.
My grandfather’s house is now unrecognizable. All the old wood slat character has been stripped away by siding.
It’s been remade from the outside in, and a ramp was added to what used to be the front porch.
My grandfather’s old pharmacy is now an insurance company.
No pharmacy in North Loup now.
Also, now long gone in North Loup are the three bars, the Jack and Jill grocery store, Vera’s clothing store and the North Loup Cafe. All disappeared. All lost. All not replaced. I guess if you want to eat, drink, and shop you head on up Highway 11 to Ord, 11 miles away.
Maybe the town motto might just be, “North Loup: We won’t feed you, heal you, liquor you up, or clothe you — but you can get whole life insurance coverage day or night!”
The all-volunteer fire department is the same as it ever was.
Your neighbors are your rescuers; you rescue your neighbors.
Here’s the North Loup library. I think there used to be a skating rink inside.
The building looks the same as it ever was four decades ago.
This is the building where, after my grandfather died, we spent $400 to buy four used tires for his 1966 Plymouth Fury II (with Positraction)!
His old car became my first car in 1980. I street named the Plymouth, “The Porsche.”
The “North Loup Valley Bank” bank looks the same — but now bears a new name and ownership.
The beautiful old brick Post Office is now an art gallery, and so now there’s a whole new, standalone, Post Office building right next to a new war memorial for the local missing and the dead.
The Nebraska Cornhuskers are almost as popular as Popcorn in North Loup!
Sure, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln is a “football school” but the Loup Valley is still prime scarlet and cream country!
Fun family members Russ and Kathy are even on the Go Big Red team with their ephemeral “Big Red Donuts” food truck that satiates palates all over Valley County!
I believe the Donut Truck began life as some sort of paramedic rescue truck. Still is, I guess. “Rescued by a Glazed Bear Claw with Sprinkles!”
While North Loup loves their Huskers — they just plain love their Popcorn more. Popcorn butters the bills. Popcorn kernels the family. Popcorn eats history.
Popcorn pops the future!
This wraps up our 2024 tour of North Loup, Nebraska. So many things have changed, and so many things that have died have not been replaced. The rise of a cross-county Co-Op brings great hope for the economic and social future expansion of North Loup.
For me, North Loup, Nebraska will always remain the beloved home I never had, and the place I never wanted to leave. Let’s hope it won’t be another 40 years before I return!
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https://bolesblogs.com/2024/08/09/return-to-the-braided-prairie-a-2024-north-loup-photo-memory/
#1984 #braidedPrairie #donutTruck #firehouse #grandpa #nebraska #northLoup #pharmacy #photographs #plymouthFuryIi #popcornDays #russAndKathy #smallTown #village