Daily Mechanical Protocols

Daily Mechanical Protocols are a performance arena that modern individuals are compelled to engage with. Risk and inconsistency are indispensable in the arena. They are also elements of these daily mechanical protocols.

Although inconsistency is inherent in human nature, putting it aside and throwing ourselves into the risk is one of the most important protocols.

The Oxford Dictionary chose Brain Rot as its word of the year for 2024. It has been one of the most prominent topics of discussion lately. Could brain rot be a decay caused by mechanical standards intertwined with performance anxiety?

In this regard, the book In Praise of Risk was one of the best books I have read recently. Nowadays, Erving Hoffman’s book The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life has fascinated me. He focuses on the fine details of the individual’s social roles and masks.

It is also a book of formal sociological observations about how roles and masks are transformed into performance and the nature of this performance. It deals with the individual in the performance art that encompasses daily mechanical protocols.

Making a difference becomes more genuine when risk is taken on an individual level and the courage to overcome inconsistency is strongly demonstrated in front of society.

No matter how rigid social patterns may appear to the individual, the person needs to embrace this deterrent impulse.

Daily Mechanical Protocols: Inconsistent Standards

In particular, The radical subject is a victim of Daily Mechanical Protocols. These rigid protocols is in everywhere.

While the first meaning that comes to mind for decay is a chemical process, the topic is also somewhat related to creativity. This year’s word has produced lost generations of a performance era that applies chemical censorship to our creativity and then decays it.

What censors the creative chemistry within a person is the avoidance of risk. In a performance-based society shaped by mechanical standards, taking risks is an attitude everyone avoids.

Although it may be a bit of a cliché, most of us know that those who make a difference or contribute to deviation from the norm are the ones who take risks. Praising risk requires mathematics. The mathematics that transforms habits into strong protocols!

When we take risks, we suddenly become inconsistent in the eyes of others. However, this perception is an edit that comes back to us from the eyes of others. This inconsistency we notice when taking risks causes us to question our own actions. All of sudden, our courage is broken and indecision sets in. Hence, it is something excluded by Daily Mechanical Protocols.

Meanwhile, when a person has strong sources of resilience, taking risks becomes a practice for them. They throw themselves into the experiential and the unknown. At this point, we begin to see that perceptions and concepts are turned upside down. This reversal of perspective and playfulness relaxes the person.

Although the staging of performance is dependent on the dynamics and perspective, individuals living in society actually seek a shock wave. They crave an action that will surprise them and trigger their emotions. That is why they want to eliminate boredom and routine from their lives.

Daily Mechanical Protocols: Making a Difference

One of the Daily Mechanical Protocols is making a difference. Making a difference is important, but how you demonstrate that difference is also much more important now. Because everyone has to do that. When it comes to the individual, this word has taken on a meaning that the individual must internalize and do justice to.

The Palliative Society and The Smell of Time (Byung Chul Han) emphasized that making a difference on a performance stage where taking breaks or pausing to catch one’s breath is discouraged.

One melts away and crumbles under the performative pressure of time is a rather insidious and challenging process.

We have now reached the end of the postmodern era, as described by Zygmunt Bauman, in which we seek autobiographical solutions to social contradictions. In the Post-Truth Era, being performative is measured by how much an individual can transform their own mind and body into performance mathematics. As Ronald Dworkin states, “The value of our lives is performance value; when performance is removed, little remains.”

Under these circumstances, making a difference has become a cliché. Excessive emphasis on making a difference is forcing people to be quite performative. Everyone must find the how themselves.

Hi, I’m okanhoruz

I'm advocator of the Transhumanism . Transhumanism envison a future where humans can transcend biological / cultural / environmental limitations- barriers through advancement like genetic engineering , artificial intelligence and cyborg technologies. In this sense ,my motivations : * I'm trying to be constant learner and improver in my personal and business life . I would like to combine and transform any piece of knowledge- experience into new things as a synthesizers. * Push the boundaries of the unknown * Learn and discover new potentials along the way * Acquire the skills necessary to build a purposeful product and connections * Gaining knowledge, perspectives and mastering human relations in proactive cycles is one of the my greatest inner motivation. * Throughout my career and academical life, I have contributed to impacting business outcomes through effective organization, prioritization and execution of key projects. I'm interested in cognitive - behavioral science (Neuro-Technology) .These observations and researches enriched my standpoints in accordan with social science and daily life.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *