There has been some evidence in recent years that our language affects our thoughts. I want to be pro-active in this matter, so I've decided to make a stronger push in my life to include 3 specific changes.
metrics: As
philbutrin pointed out recently, the USA looks rather silly as a holdout on officially adopting the metric system. America has been in the process of converting
since 1975. I remember attending classrooms where we talked about the new system and our conversion to it. I also remember 1982 when President Reagan defunded and closed the office that was supposed to be helping the nation make the conversion. We got stuck with liter Coke bottles but gallons of milk and gasoline.
I've been in the habit of posting temperatures in both Fahrenheit and Celsius. That practice ends now. I will post only in Celsius.
I have an easier time (because of the aforementioned school classes) thinking of small units of distance in terms of meters and centimeters. Harder, however, are long distances. It doesn't help that roadway signs are no longer posted in dual metrics. Thank you again, President Reagan. It will be difficult to figure out my vehicle mileage. I'll still call it "mileage" rather than "kilometerage".
history: Calendars, in addition to helping us predict future events, are supposed to help us relate current events to past ones. I've never been able fully to wrap my mind around our current year-counting system. Enough of that silliness. I've grown lax in adhering to my
Recorded Human History timeline. I'll work harder at posting dates in this RHH format. Oversimplified, just add 4,000 to the current Gregorian year and you'll have your RHH date. Welcome to the year 6010! *cheer*
Signing/dating my checks will be confusing to me, since I'm guessing that banks would not appreciate or adopt the new and more sensible calendar. I'll have to convert to Gregorian years when I pay debts.
gender: I'm glad that English doesn't insist upon gender for every single noun. Pronouns, however, are an obvious holdout to older ways of thinking. I dislike "s/he" which is readable but unpronounceable. I dislike "they" as a neutral singular. I have not found a
consistent usage among transgender folk yet, but I'm going to choose one now. I'm selecting a modified
Xe vocabulary. This option probably feels more natural to me only because of prior exposure. This language was proposed by Jim Sinclair (genderless autistic human), and I spent a few years reading xer email communications.
The letter "X" is pronounced like the letter "Z", as in the familiar corporate name "Xerox".
- xe (plural they); replaces he, she, and it
- xem (plural them); replaces him, her, and it
- xer (plural their); replaces his, her, and its
I am changing the official "xir" or "xyr" spelling into "xer" just to maintain vowel consistency. I very much prefer that every vowel be either "e" or "i" instead of being mixed.