I was talking with a friend Sunday about some things that bother us about mainstream middle-class American culture. She was telling me about having to go to the home of a relative for holidays for years. Everyone was expected to buy expensive presents for everyone at Christmas.
She was describing her sister’s house, which had five bedrooms, five baths, work room, weight room, art room, pool, trampoline, built-in everything, eight televisions with eight cable boxes and a three-car garage.
It sounds like a really nice house, doesn’t it? So why was my friend bothered by it all? And why did the description sound so suffocating and sickening to me?
It was hard to put my finger on it, but I thought about it for much of the afternoon. I’ve thought about this issue before and I sometimes have trouble justifying the revulsion I feel for such things. I can try to justify my feelings in practical terms by talking about the waste of money and resources that go into such places, but the real answer goes much deeper than that. (Here’s another attempt I made about 18 months ago to answer the same question.)
Trying to understand why I feel this way is making it easier for me to understand why punks, goths, rappers and other “weirdos” of the world dress as they do and reject acting and looking like what we consider normal.

In other news, donations keep pouring in to feed the monkeys
Who’s afraid of a federal shutdown? Many of us hope for the real thing
What if most money spent for university degrees is useless?
Until we experience awakening, we’re blind to truth in our hearts
Putin’s Russia: Friends, enemies or just another basket case state?
Angry behavior on social media is killing you and hurting your cause
Too many voices with little to say: Politics matters less and less to me
‘I know who you are,’ she said. ‘Do you know who you really are?’
Ghost from my past haunts me, but leaves me without answers