Finding Commonality
[[{“value”:” By Kirk McCarley The Dictionary.com word of the year for 2025 was actually comprised of numbers rather than letters. One might ask, “Should numbers even qualify?,” but apparently, from the perspective of the leading online dictionary and reference website, it passed the standard. So, what is “6-7?” Pronounced “six seven” it is an internet meme and slang term that emerged this year on Tik Tok and Instagram Reels. It stemmed from lyrics in a song by rapper Skrilla, with a backdrop of “tall” NBA players in the music video. The meaning of the term is subject to conjecture; it can arguably coincide with multiple interpretations, including the most non-committal of all elucidations: “whatever.” Hearing the term transported me back to my freshman year in college and an appealing course alternative entitled “Theater of the Absurd,” a study of a series of unusual and provocative plays including classics such as “Our Town” and “Waiting for Godot.” Tossed into the mix was a 1942 product by Thornton Wilder, “The Skin of Our Teeth,” which envisioned a very cold future earth on the precipice of a new ice age. It was so cold in fact that “dogs are sticking to the sidewalks” and so chaotic and confused that the “world is at sixes and sevens.” With so many varieties of interpretation and juxtaposition, is it no wonder that we live in a state of consistent misunderstanding? Where is that place where we find a common language with others? How might we make...
Read More









