Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Baby Got [Behind]


You are standing at a filing cabinet, appearing busy to the unsuspecting passersby, when one of such said passersby—in this case a co-worker—approaches directly to your right. He is standing at attention, staring at the side of your head. The co-worker asks, “Where is that TPS report you were working on?” The report is directly to your left, sitting on a desk. You reply simply, “On the desk behind me.” The co-worker searches dutifully in the direction opposite your backside and finds nothing. “Behind you? I see nothing!”

When used to indicate direction, to whom is the term behind relative?
I’m not exactly sure how, but this orientational paradox came to me, as though in a dream, and I’ve been struggling with it erstwhile. Wisely I harnessed the immaculate power of MS Paint to put together some unsightly illustrations depicting casually conversing people who ended up somehow looking like decapitated snowmen.


The scenario mentioned above can be seen in Figure 1.A:

I would agree with those who say in this instance behind is a poor choice to identify the exact location of the TPS report in relation to Mr. X. Indeed, the predicted outcome would resemble something like what we see in Figure 2.A:

Malaise has occurred because of poor directional clues. Though mildly annoying to Mr. Y, the enigmatic use of the term behind may have, in fact, been a thoughtful gesture.

Why?

It is obvious from Figure 1.A that the term behind in not relative to Mr. X; either he has used this language intentionally, or has suffered from some form of arterial sclerosis. But I digress. If Mr. X was tacitly using ”behind” as being relative to Mr. Y, then it seems less strange. Still a bit of a stretch for you?


Consider the following:
Mr. X and Mr. Y are searching for the TPS report together. So basically the same scenario from before, except the cat, the nonhuman being it is, has no input into instructing anyone about where the report is. In Figure 3.A, Mr. X tells Mr. Y the report is behind the cat, and suddenly the location of the report is obvious. Mr. Y doesn’t look in the direction of the cat’s furry posterior; indeed it is altogether unnecessary.

Why?

Because the term behind now is only relative to the position of the cat to Mr. Y; either because to Mr. Y the cat is little more than an inanimate object that has no clearly defined front or backside (i.e., a box), or—for all intents and purposes—the side of the cat facing Mr. Y temporally becomes its front. Ergo, the side of the cat opposite Mr. Y is the backside, and—therefore—behind the cat.



In certain situations (e.g., Figure 4.A) the communication is direct and very much non-ambiguous; it takes an insignificant amount of effort to decipher the direction to which the speaker refers. However, the same scenario may yield a markedly dissimilar outcome if the term behind is relative to two different parties. As in Figure 5.A, the snake is relative to Mr. Y and Mr. Z in that it is on the opposing side of Mr. X. Although Mr. Y is cruelly whispering to Mr. Z that there is a snake behind Mr. X, Mr. X assumes that the position of the snake is only relative to him, Mr. X, and is bitten on the left ear as a result.


In conclusion, I apologize for this pointlessness and my gratuitous use of the word behind.

5 comments:

Amy Butler said...

Maybe you should make a series of these illustrations and title it "Snowmen in the Workplace."

bsilverthorne said...

You have made a lasting impression on on my knowledge of the world.

Jeremy said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Jeremy said...

Perhaps you could compile your working snowmen drawings into a handy pamphlet that can be easily passed out to strangers? I know I'd like to own one.

Also, what of the following situation? Consider Figure 1.A only rotate Mr. X counterclockwise by 90 degrees, so that he is facing the report. If Mr. Y still approaches from stage right and asks "Where is the report?" then Mr. X - if he uses the same original logic - might still reply "Behind me." I would think that such a response would cause Mr. Y to look down in the vicinity of his own feet because he'd translate such a response as "Right in front of you." Surely Mr. X would not respond with "Behind me" when he's directly facing the report? Otherwise he is willfully creating confusion and should therefore be paddled or subjected to some other form of punishment.

P.S. I expect at least one more post in the next month or so that includes more of these drawings.

jasien said...

My question is simply this:

If Mr. X is looking forward and approached from the left by Mr. Y. And after hearing the question "where is the TPS report", he turns only his head to look Mr. Y directly in the eye, does the TPS report then become behind him as opposed to beside him? What part of the human body dictates what is behind us and what is beside us? I need to know the answer to this.