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Nora Sawyer
Level 1: 10 points
Alltime Score: 120 points
Last Logged In: October 5th, 2009


retired
15 + 45 points

Object Annotation by Nora Sawyer

December 13th, 2007 12:29 AM

INSTRUCTIONS: Pick a local public object that you enjoy and leave a note on it describing your feelings in great detail.

So I was trying to think of something out in the world I particularly liked, some object unique, public, something unlike anything else in all the world, something perfectly San Francisco.

It was hungry work, so I left my office and headed down the street to grab some snacks. And then I saw it: something that made me realize that something same, something drab and innocuous, could be, nay must be loved. It was a mailbox, but one unlike the ones I normally interacted with in my quotidian mailing moments. This was an entirely closed off box, a waystation used only by mail and mailmen. This mailbox selects its own society, not deigning to speak to the everyday riff-raff whose letters and packages it carries safely in its gut. This mailbox is the perfect confidant: recieving all our secrets, only relinquishing them to an entrusted compatriot who, through rain and sleet and snow and ice, will get them where we need them to go.

Also, I like its shape.

Anyway, I wrote it a letter (more of an ode/manifesto really). Here it is:

- smaller

mailbox_long.jpeg

Valencia & 19th, 12/13/2007


mailbox_close.jpeg

mailbox_close.jpeg

The text reads: "Have you ever really thought about these mailboxes? The ones that have no opening, recieve no mail, that only serve as way-stations for missives aready in transit? How noble it is, how selfless! A homely pepper pot, sturdy, functional, indifferent. A stoic admiral, drably blending into the backroud, heroics forgotten, ensuring that both your rent and your scenic postcards make their way to their appointed destinations. Imagine the letters in its belly, right now. Imagine loving something so decent, so contained, so full of possibilities! Public infrastructure is what separates man from beast! Hug a mailbox! Hug this mailbox! Live! Love!"



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posted by Charlie Fish on December 13th, 2007 2:46 AM

This is great - welcome to the game.