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Gaming Memories Helping to Heal Katrina Wounds

waterlogged writes "Lara Crigger writes a compelling account of the effects of hurricane Katrina on a person's sense of videogames in The Escapist. From the article: 'Hurricanes destroy more than just property; they destroy the sense of property, as well. They smash that universal belief that objects intrinsically carry some emotional gravity or weight. Acts of destruction remind us that physical substances are only equal to the exact sum of their parts: Plastic and cotton, metal or wood. What's left over is a painful buoyancy, an unbearable absence of feeling; you mourn not just your lost PS2 games or your Xbox controllers but also the fact that these once precious things have been proven completely meaningless. Even if they do remain intact after the storm (like the Samus poster), the only entity that really survives is you.'"

27 of 152 comments (clear)

  1. Being illiterate is fun by DoctaWatson · · Score: 4, Funny

    Because, in my mind, games can heal katana wounds.

  2. Awakening by jbbernar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    All this is a good thing. Eventually you'll realize that even you don't exist. That'll be even better.

    1. Re:Awakening by JavaBrain · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Mod parent up -- this is pure Buddhism and also appropriate to the thread -- the whole discussion really belongs in a Buddhist forum rather than videogaming. The idea that "things" have a fundamental value (as opposed to assigned values) with regard to mind, is what this addressing. The "self" (which the parent points out isn't real) is another created object of the mind. Self is really handy for locational reference (in time and space) and lets you navigate around your world, come up with schedules, etc. -- however it can be muted, so it's not unavoidable, and thus not fundamental -- it's created by mind.

  3. XBox? by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Funny

    If they had any of the original controllers they could have climbed on them and floated to safety.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  4. Katrina's influence on gaming by amightywind · · Score: 4, Interesting
    you mourn not just your lost PS2 games or your Xbox controllers but also the fact that these once precious things have been proven completely meaningless.

    Deep. It makes me think that the lawless, gangbanging aftermath of Katrina in New orleans would make a compelling Grand Theft Auto scenario.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  5. Some damn guru tried to tell me that once by spun · · Score: 4, Funny

    So I stomped on his foot.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  6. Imagine that.... by Almahtar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    so it's a new thing that deriving your life's worth from your material possessions leaves you lacking in the long run? Don't feel sorry for these people whose stuff was destroyed: at least they have a chance at gaining perspective. Feel sorry for the guy that's still got his XBox and wastes all day, every day on it, or the guy that has a bright shiny car but no sense of personal worth.

    1. Re:Imagine that.... by guardiangod · · Score: 2

      Maybe you should read this following article...


      Dugald Christie died on a years-long mission of conscience drove him for years
      He bicycled to work. He lived in a rented basement suite. He was a transplanted Scot who eschewed scotch but drank hot water with cream and sugar. A devout Anglican, he kept his offices in a church, arrived for work at daybreak and left, usually, 12 to 14 hours later. He could have made lots of money in his lifetime. He chose instead to make a difference.

      Dugald Christie was a lawyer, but he was not like most lawyers. He was not like most people. A colleague called him "the Mother Teresa of the bar." When the Trial Lawyers Association of B.C. honoured him for his life's work in March, he was introduced as being "every lawyer's conscience of their professional obligations" -- this high praise earned in a profession often accused of not having a conscience.

      He died Monday at the age of 65. He was struck and killed by a minivan on the Trans-Canada Highway near Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.

      He was riding his bicycle, and it was his conscience that had brought him to that fateful place.

      He was cycling across Canada to raise awareness about the average person's lack of access to the judicial system. Christie called it the ABCs of true justice -- affordable, brief and comprehensible -- and he was gathering signatures along the way on a petition he was going to present to Prime Minister Stephen Harper. His ultimate destination was St. John's, N.L., where he was to address the Canadian Bar Association.

      Christie was the founder and director of the Western Canada Society to Access Justice.

      Its work is all done pro bono -- the waiving of legal fees as a charitable act -- and it was Christie's job, or rather his cause in life, to get top-flight lawyers to represent needy clients.

      He did this through sheer hard work. Christie was an indefatigable and constant presence -- as good consciences are -- and he was always working the phones to get donations or a lawyer's help.

      He knew almost every lawyer in town, and his calls enjoyed a sort of fame among the legal community. With a trace of his Scottish brogue, he would open, simply, with "Dugald Christie here," and the lawyer on the other end of the line knew it was time to pony up.

      His work paid off. By the time of his death, Christie and the society had 61 clinics from Campbell River to Winnipeg and more than 400 lawyers donating their services. He made it into the largest legal aid service in the province.

      "I have tremendous respect for his ability and commitment to pro bono work," said B.C. Supreme Court Chief Justice Donald Brenner, "and I know that he had a goal that his clinics would be available to 95 per cent of all British Columbians. I think he achieved that this spring."

      Brenner was a fan of Christie's.

      "I have in the past described him as not everyone's cup of tea, but he was an achiever, a man who didn't just talk about doing good, but worked hard to do good, and I have great respect for him. I use that old journalistic saying to describe him: He comforted the afflicted and afflicted the comfortable."

      More often than not, he afflicted those in the law itself.

      n 2003, he filed a formal complaint against B.C. Court of Appeal Justice Mary Southin, accusing her of encouraging people to defy smoking laws while continuing to sit in judgment of others.

      He maintained Southin had "brought the administration of justice into disrepute" by refusing to stop smoking in her office, despite a 1998 Workers' Compensation ban against smoking in the workplace. He filed the complaint after it was reported then attorney-general Geoff Plant had okayed a $19,000 ventilation system for her office at the Vancouver Law Courts.

      But it was Christie's prolonged fight against the province's move in

  7. Relevant Quote by KingoftheAges · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "It's only after you've lost everything," Tyler says, "that you're free to do anything."

    1. Re:Relevant Quote by sTalking_Goat · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Sticking feathers up your butt does not make you a chicken."

      --

      My days of not taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle...

  8. Games are merely copies of bits. by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Insightful
    > Hurricanes destroy more than just property; they destroy the sense of property, as well. They smash that universal belief that objects intrinsically carry some emotional gravity or weight. Acts of destruction remind us that physical substances are only equal to the exact sum of their parts: Plastic and cotton, metal or wood.

    Which is why if a hurricane comes and crushes my console and sweeps away my games, I've lost nothing. The atoms don't matter -- I can buy another plastic console, and buy another piece of plastic and aluminum with some bits on it. I've lost nothing. The long numbers (a DVD with a game on it is just a multibillion-digit-long number) that, when read into a properly-configured piece of plastic and ceramic (say, an XBox or PS2), come to life as video games are of no consequence because they're easily replaced.

    But if a hurricane sweeps away my only copies (and my not-remote-enough backups) of the somewhat shorter numbers (million-digit-long strings of bits) that represent my digital photo archive, and then we can talk about pain.

    All numbers are unequal. But some are more unequal than others.

  9. Those aren't wounds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's called a reality check. Believe it or not, stuff doesn't last. Not even big stuff. Life goes on...it's good to be reminded of what's important; we all need that from time to time.

  10. Katrina destroyed PS2 and Xbox consoles by Kohath · · Score: 4, Funny

    Why did Katrina destroy PS2 and Xbox consoles? We know why.

    It's because George Bush doesn't care about black game consoles.

  11. wow by crabpeople · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This article is so melodramatic its insane.

    Hanging close to a window now smashed in by Katrina is a limited edition poster of Samus Aran, circa Super Metroid era. Gleaming in her Varia Suit, she kneels among sand and rocks, with her smoking arm cannon raised upward and the lonely Zebian desert reflected in her visor. Only 2,000 were ever made, and he has #1,968. But it is more than some collector's item; this poster is a tintype of the first girl to ever steal his heart. Like every man (and most women) of his generation, part of him still loves Samus Aran. She is his adolescence, his coming-of-age, a symbol of permanence and power and invincibility. What would it mean if she had been destroyed?

    That people still live here, that some of the evacuees have returned to their homes, that must mean something. But what home can stand firm on a foundation of mold and tears?

    The whole article is like that!!!
    But as we clean, I can't help but feel something indistinct and odd has transpired. I notice he avoids looking Samus' direction. Even as he carefully packs away the poster to be sent by mail to our apartment up north, he does not look too closely at her, and he does not idle in his task. Briefly, I wonder if he might blame her somehow for surviving the hurricane. Or, in light of his subtle detachment, if she had really survived at all.

    wow. seriously someone should tell this chick that not everything is an emotional rollercoaster. I get it, hes stoic marble man and your the sensitive girl that brings out his soft side, while probing his mysterious ways. just wow. This puts some of those homoerotic slashdot trolls to shame.

    --
    I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    1. Re:wow by jaseparlo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Do you have any clue? It's called literature, pick up a book one day and you might discover it. When you are writing to express an emotion you felt strongly at a time and you want your reader to relate, you use emotive language. This is a descriptive passage, about 'life' (you may have heard of it), not yet another review of yet another Madden '0, of course it's gonna seem emotional.

      --
      All available data suggest that regardless of any of this, the sun will still come up tomorrow.
    2. Re:wow by pilkul · · Score: 3, Funny

      You must feel shivers of aesthetic bliss when you read Livejournal.

    3. Re:wow by localroger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Been to New Orleans since Katrina? The place will have that effect on you. Even now, almost a year after the storm, it still does. Everyone who comes here and visits Lakeview or Chalmette says the same thing -- the scale of what happened here can't be conveyed by photography or video or even writing. You come thinking you know what to expect because you've seen the pictures and the TV reports and it still just knocks you down.

      This is just one more person who tried to convey what it was like, and ultimately as we all do failed.

      --
      Brackets contain world's first nanosig, highly magnified:[.]
  12. Where have I heard that before? by spun · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Freedom's just another word for nothin' left to lose"
    --Janis Joplin

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  13. News for Nerds: Stuff Doesn't Matter by Eberlin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Wait, have we gone so far into materialism that this becomes a wake-up call -- holy crap, my copy of Halo 2 doesn't matter in the long run!

    Sure, I guess we all need that reminder one way or another and great disasters have a way of giving us that reality check...but Katrina linking us to reality through ownership of Video Games? How frickin shallow are we?

    Just to get it over with, here are a few things to remember:

    Material posessions don't mean jack in the long run.

    Your SAT score doesn't mean jack in the long run either.

    Your high score in Tetris, your Super Mario Brothers speed run, and your 100pct completion rating for San Andreas...all insignificant. ...but if you vote for CowboyNeal in the slashdot polls -- that, my friend, can lead to the cure for cancer. Keep that in mind next time you click on the other options.

    Really, when it comes down to it, stuff doesn't matter much at all.

    1. Re:News for Nerds: Stuff Doesn't Matter by TrekkieGod · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What matters to you isn't the same thing that matters to me and vice-versa. To answer your question, we're really 'frickin' shallow.

      The point is, we seek to be happy and avoid pain. What matters to us is whatever can help us seek happiness and avoid pain. To that end, owning video game consoles can bring you happiness, but they can't offset the pain brought on by katrina. It's as simple as that. Material posessions matter very much in the long run if you enjoy having them. Your SAT score matters if getting into that great university would make you happy. Getting high scores in video games certainly do make people giddy. Curing cancer means absolutely nothing to people who do not have cancer or know someone with cancer...except that you'll get that warm fuzzy feeling that if you end up getting it in the future, it won't be a big deal. It's one less thing to fear and, truthfully, that's the only reason people care.

      And there's nothing wrong with that.

      --

      Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

  14. You guys are missing the lesson in this by TrekCycling · · Score: 2, Funny

    Buy TWO copies of all your favorite games and store the second copy "off-site" in case of a natural disaster. This goes for memory cards as well.

    Then once you get your life back together from the hurricane you can pick up where you left off in God of War.

    Backups. The lesson is backups.

  15. ph by u-238 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    isn't that the whole point? having a good time with friends?

    i remember realizing this some time during my ROM collecting phase -- it didn't take long before i realized that it wasn't the gameplay i craved but the memories of that time of life (childhood).

    tell me how one's fond recollections of videogame playing--with brothers, sisters, neighborhood friends--are different from your grandparent's stories of fort building and crayfish hunting?

  16. -1, Redundant by I+Like+Pudding · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, video games aren't really that important when your personal Maslow Hierarchy goes Jenga.

    Big. Fucking. Revelation.

    Boy, I was drowning this one time and I sure needed air and not video games. Makes you think LOL!!111

  17. Wow, you're fucked up in the head by Moraelin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First the disclaimer: I'm not an American, I'm not in the USA, I don't even have relatives there or anything. And I'll be the first to bitch and moan about contemporary American politics and about the occasional chest-thumping redneck. But this... you, sir, are a fucking lunatic and it's people like you that are the problem with the world today. Seriously.

    For starters even if you make everyone who voted for Bush personally responsible for all of Bush's idiocies, only slightly less than half the votes went to Bush. So what's your problem with the other half, then? You're willing to dance on someone's grave just because they were born in the USA, or what? How fucked up is that?

    And at that point, how does it make you any better? If you're willing to cheer for destruction and suffering inflicted upon civilians, just because they're in the USA, then how does that make you better than those who wish the same on people just because they're born in Iraq? No, seriously. What moral high ground can you claim, from which to look down on them, when you're as big an idiot as the most retarded bible-thumping rednecks they have?

    And I'm serious about the "people like you" part. The whole vicious circle of inflicting nasty stuff upon each other is based on people taking the whole Us-Vs-Them thing too seriously. People willing to wish you a flaming death just because of where you were born or who your grandparents were. It's _precisely_ such people who thought it would be a great idea to fly an airplane full of innocent civilians into a building full of innocent civilians, or anything of that calibre. All the way back into ancient history, when an army entered a city and proceeded to rape, kill and enslave just to show them who's the new boss, it was just that mentality that was the problem. That it's "Us" vs "Them". That if you happen to be born in Carthage, you're personally to blame for what Hannibal did to Rome. Or that if you were living in Jerusalem, you're personally responsible for the Muslims' being in command there. (See the Crusaders slaughtering a ridiculous number of the very Christians they were supposedly trying to save.)

    And you're willing to cheer for... what? For Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, i.e., for permanent psychological damage? Because under the whole bullshit philosophy angle in the summary, that's the cruel reality. It's not that those people had a flash of Nirvana-like enlightenment that material possessions are worthless. It's that those people had the trauma of seeing everything they owned turned into junk or washed away, and went through some hell just keeping onto their very life. A lot of them are probably _affraid_ to get attached to any item any more, and are looking forward to a life spent in fight-or-flight mode, and of waking up in cold sweat after a nightmare about it.

    PTSD is a bitch. Your brain gets switched into a semi-permanent mode of trying to learn how you should have dealt with the horror where you actually had no control and no way out. There is nothing to learn, but that's the only thing that would naturally end it. So you're stuck re-living it over and over again. And yet avoiding anything that reminds you of it. So, yes, a lot of them will be stuck fearing the very notion of ever getting attached to something or someone ever again. It's not just their gaming life that's taken a change, it's that their whole _Real_ _Life_ is fucked up now. Including any hope of a meaningful family life, social life, etc.

    Yes, it's not fun for the people who got it in Iraq. (Both American soldiers and Iraqis.) But it's not fun for the poor buggers that got it from Katrina.

    And frankly, I find it distasteful to use someone's hell to make some personal political point with. That goes for both you, and the pseudo-philosophy in TFA. Those people didn't reach some Zen enlightenment, they were scarred for life. And if all someone can think about is how it affects the gaming habbits, that someone is either a prick or completely out of touch with reality.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Wow, you're fucked up in the head by SavvyPlayer · · Score: 3, Insightful
      And would everyone please stop talking about how this is Isreal vs. Muslims. Lebanon is 40% Christain. This is not Isreal vs. Muslims, its Isreal vs. anyone not jewish.

      Israel's action in Lebanon is no more an action against Lebanon than the thousands of rockets fired into Israel from Lebanon represent Lebanese foreign policy. This conflict has two well defined opponents, Israel & a vastly uderestimated microstate, Hezbollah. I'll leave it an exercise for the reader to determine the side which most indiscriminately chose to establish base-camp amongst non-partisan, civilian population centers on its eve of battle.

      Imagine for a moment you lived in a high-density urban area. How would you feel if neighbors you had never met suddenly initiated a wholesale assault on a neighboring country without your government's knowledge or consent?
  18. Survival Situation by CodeBuster · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It is actually not surprising that disaster situations tend to change people's priorities when it comes to physical possessions and property. Would you rather have your intact XBOX (w/working controllers) but no power OR MREs, Jeep Wrangler (or other four wheel drive vehicle), jerry cans w/fuel, waterproof matches, and your trusty sidearm (w/box of ammunition)? Actually, getting Americans to be more self-sufficient in a survival situation is probably a good thing as opposed to the throw away, outsourcing, let someone else do it society that we live in today. It is unfortunate that people suffered and in some cases lost their lives, but perhaps this will remind people that the government is not responsible for the survival of any one citizen, but rather society in general. You have to be prepared to take matters into your own hands because the police, government, coast guard, etc...will not always be there to help you.

  19. Re: the correct citation by Tiro · · Score: 3, Informative
    Freedom's just another word for nothin' left to lose.
    Kris Kristofferson