When the man behind Dilbert lost his voice

I loved Dilbert when I was younger and used to read Scott Adams’ blog regularly back in the day.

His dry humour and sharp insights into both corporate and modern life was perceptive in highlighting absurdities and dysfunctions which people accepted as the norm back then.

And who has not met someone who completely exemplifies the Dilbert principle? 😂

At some point, however, I had to actively disengage from his material as he moved into increasingly divisive territory.

That shift and decline was striking to me; it seemed to take place around the same time he opened up about his longstanding struggle with spasmodic dysphonia, a voice disorder that affected his ability to speak publicly.

It’s the same condition which present US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr has discussed living with.

Coincidentally, Kennedy himself is also known for a number of widely disputed views.

I don’t know whether there’s any connection between the health struggles both went through and their later public positions, and I certainly don’t mean to suggest a causal link.

Nevertheless, it’s hard not to notice how different the later chapters of their life felt from their early ones, both before and after being afflicted with the condition.

I wonder whether their paths reflect a familiar pattern among many men who encounter a major personal challenge.

Perhaps they sought support from their network but when that help was not forthcoming, the resulting isolation led them to turn elsewhere and in a completely different direction.

I hope in his next comic strip or podcast, wherever he is, Adams reclaims the kinder, gentler voice that once shone through his cartoons.

May the afterlife be more lovely and less painful than the world he spent a lifetime lampooning.

Stuff you must read today (Fri, 11 Oct 2013) – The Psychology of Language Edition

  • The psychology of language: Which words matter the most when we talk | The Buffer Blog
    “By always focusing on ‘How will this make someone feel?’ whenever [we wrote] even a single line, we immediately improved the amount of responses we got from our users”.
     
  • The Power of Names | The New Yorker
    “…words carry hidden baggage that may play at least some role in shaping thought. What’s surprising, perhaps, is how profoundly a single word can shape material outcomes over time”.
     
  • The Power of a Word | The Dilbert Blog
    Observe how an argument is transformed when a loaded word is substituted with another word that reframes the discourse.
     
  • What It Should Have Been: Edition #3 | Vox Nostra: A Voice Of Our Own
    Part of the Disabled People’s Association, Singapore’s public education initiative on the use of proper terminology to describe people with disabilities. Find out more about how this started here.
     
  • Are You a Language Bully? | Slate
    “Those who engage in public corrections of this sort often are looking to feel good about themselves, and…displays of language all-knowing-ness provide a ready-made, two-pronged opportunity to do so. ‘The way we evaluate our competence is relative to other people,’ he says. ‘If I need to feel good about my language skills, one way that I could do that would be to give myself evidence that my language skills are awesome. Another is to give myself evidence that other people’s language skills suck. So by putting down other people, I can feel better about myself.'”.

    Whoops :S

Stuff you must read today (Wed, 9 Jan 2013)