Un-Social Media
The gentle art of real life
Having spent almost 6 months offline, relating to people in the real world has been a wonderful re-discovery of a slow, analog life.
The words all left me
Lifeless
Hoping
Breathing like the drowning man
— The Cure
At the start of the year, it got to the point where I was finding life over-whelming. To be specific, it was my online existence that was what was triggering significant levels of anxiousness.
I was also bombarded daily with ‘friend’ requests from complete strangers, who strangely didn’t even have any history. I was continually being added to Groups by entrepreneurs and sales-people, and automatically becoming a follower of their Pages.
Conversations were becoming toxic, my newsfeed was filled with hyperbole, vitriol, and sales copy. My inbox full of invitations to events, workshops, and seminars I wasn’t interested in from people I didn’t know.
On top of this was an issue of privacy that emerged, as someone decided to cause trouble for me by weaving together (i.e. curating) several isolated posts to construct a narrative that cast a negative light on me. That’s been more-or-less sorted out now, with relevent parties now having the actual truth, and the accuser standing with egg on their face.
All the while, a certain global social media giant has been in damage control, with accusations of data misuse, privacy concerns, and fake accounts being used to shatter the foundations of democratic process.
Having shut my Clinical Practice and ‘retired’ from my profession, I was undergoing something of an ego-death anyway, rediscovering my personal identity after years of being sucked into the treadmill of personal branding and promotional diatribe. I was drowning.
Photo by Jacob Walti on Unsplash
I deleted and de-activated all my accounts. I retained an active account on Medium, but even then I found it difficult to read articles that somehow inspired me in the state I was in. So I just shut everything off, continuing to write, keeping my work to myself.
Most of this journey has been documented in what I finally decided to publish on this website over the last couple of months. Struggles with identity, humility vs hubris, and contemplations on what I had witnessed and been part of in this very new online world.
But over the last few months, inspired by hope, I have re-discovered the little things that cannot be found in a virtual world. The small, humble aspects of a normal, mundane, every-day existence in the real world that make life special.
“Call Me”
Not being on social media meant that my usual connection to my friends was essentially severed. I no longer had instant access to what was going on in their lives. Worse, I no longer knew about any parties or gatherings they were having. Conversely, they had no idea what was going on with me.
It meant staying in contact the old-fashioned way: phone calls, text messages, and maybe even email (hard to imagine that SMS and email is now considered ‘old-fashioned’, huh?!) Of course, no one had any idea what was going on. A few people messaged me to check in as they had noticed my absence online.
It also means that it takes an active, concerted effort to be in touch, and to make plans to catch up. Different to broadcasting a shout-out for social time and seeing who responds.
Calling up someone and facing the possibility of rejection for a meet-up was terrifying for an introvert like me. But actually, having someone respond and tell you personally they’re busy is much better than simply being ignored on a public call on social media.
“Down in the park”
This even shocked me, but getting so caught up in running an online business kept me disconnected from nature. I used to go for walks in the park constantly, even doing Tai Chi in the park before I got so caught up in the online world.
Walking outdoors and not taking my phone with me was even better! I could remain completely present, without checking notifications and replying to messages while I’m meant to be enjoying the fresh air and grounding myself with the earth.
Ironically, here is a picture I took the other day in the pub. It was originally intended to convince my partner to join me at this hidden local gem I had discovered.
I’ve recently discovered some cosy little pubs in my area. Again, I find myself with more spare time to enjoy real-life pleasures such as sitting by an open fire in a cute little local hipster pub, drinking a pint of stout and listening to awesome tunes on a wintery Saturday afternoon.
When I was living an online life, all my attention was on the business I was running, and the ‘social media presence’ I needed to maintain. I would be taking photos of my food, my drinks, or my environment, posting it and telling a story.
So I was probably never really present where-ever I was. Because life always seemed to be part of one constant social media campaign. It also meant that sometimes I would run into people who would recognise me from social media; a somewhat surreal experience when a stranger knows all about recent events in your life.
It’s not just pubs I’m finding. It’s old-school activities like board games, bowling, and billiards. I’m not completely old-fashioned however, I still love my console games and MMORPG’s.
“Private Universe”
And it’s a pleasure that I have known
And it’s a treasure that I have gained
— Crowded House
This kind of petit-célébrité gets really annoying for an introvert like me. It feels comforting to be somewhere and be anonymous again. Especially when you’re profession is health/wellness-related — being seen in a pub, enjoying beer and fried snacks is usually seen as a fitness faux pas. Of course, this level of expected perfectionism is just bullshit, as life is meant to be lived; just not to any extremes, is all.
There is something great about being anonymous and unknown. I don’t think I could handle being ultra-famous. The fact that I can do whatever I like and know that hundreds (if not thousands) of people don't know the intricacies of my life is freeing.
It means I only need to live up to my own expectations (which is tough enough), not those of others.
There is also something very creepy about the current state of non-privacy that is emerging courtesy of the social media phenomenon: facial recognition, apps and devices that record us without consent, and targeted advertising are just the tip of a somewhat Phillip-K-Dick-esque dystopia.
“The book I read”
Reading time was no longer scanning newsfeeds. It meant holding real books, smelling the pages, and not having some creepy back-light burning the back of my retinae.
While I love ebooks, and the idea that my ebook reader has an entire collection of texts (yes, I’m one of those people that have several books on the go), the electronic versions aren’t quite the same as holding the musty, fragile artifact in your hands.
Even better is taking it with you and sitting against a tree in the park, or on the shitty old couch in the pub. The sound of the page turning, the sensation of paper under my finger, plus being able to scribble in the margins or underline passages is something that can’t be done on a smartphone or computer screen.
I’ve also found it slows my purchases down too. It’s so easy to just keep buying and download ebooks. At first, I started to go online to search for books to buy and get posted to me. Then I took the ‘slow reading’ concept even further — what if I only read books that I happened to find in a bookstore? Because I love reading, I tend to have very long lists of books I want to read, which creates a degree of anxiousness. It requires a certain amount of patience and humility to trust that if I need to read a book, it will come across my path in the real world, instead of deliberately and aggressively seeking it out.
Photo by Thought Catalog on Unsplash
And forever and for no one I will let it all go by
And to be myself completely I’ve just got to say goodbye
— Belle and Sebastian
I’m still writing and publishing – obvious if you're reading this. I've become quite active on another excellent platform such as Steemit, which is a platform which rewards writers for their work, and creates a genuine sense of community on a very successful blockchain).
No, I don’t miss social media; I certainly missed the real world however. And of course, I’m not completely offline, I’m just moderating my time online and ensuring I’m fully tethered in the real life, with real people and real friends.
Posted from my blog PANDORA'S LOST GIFT with SteemPress : http://metametheus.net/un-social-media/
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I know what its like! I lost touch with so many people in my two years away from social media.
I'm happy to be back. I've always used facebook with concrete purpose in mind. It's basically just for staying in touch with a lot of people in different countries, sharing my art (no long my opinions so much), and finding out about events. I limit my online time based on what I have planned for the day. On days I don't have anything going on I give myself 2-3 hours (sometimes more if there is a project that requires me to use the internet) for catching up with old friends, steeming and researching stuff online and discussing certain ideas with friends, collaborations if you will. On days when I'm busy with other stuff you couldn't force me to check facebook, it's not addicting to me at all now, and I think that's all that matters.
It sounds like you need to purge some old contacts and groups. A purge also helps you in the algorithms, hah!
Yeah I did a purge when I re-activated the account, and played around with settings.
So I probably realistically check Fakebook every couple of weeks, and it shits me to tears! People are just adding me to groups and pages and sending me invites to events.... notifications are all spam, nothing noteworthy.
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nice read, I always take lil social media detox, but I never really use the big social media sites. I prefer reading a real book and write on paper.
Also, I don't own a smartphone, and I have this funny interaction when going to events, like a baseball game and they check you and say please take your phone out before you go thru the metal detector(the states), and I just begin to walk thru, and they are always Sr. your phone, and I am oh I don't have one and I get this look, does not compute.
As you say its nice to just walk around and being in the moment.
Haha that’s kinda funny. 😆
I guess it’s handy that my partner checks her Facepalm more often, so I get snippets of news. Otherwise, so much more peaceful without it.
At least when I’m on Steemit I’m reading quality content, not shit like “I’m bored here’s my cat sleeping”.
Posted using Partiko iOS
I experienced something similar recently. Unfortunately I created a spark while dusting out my desktop and fried the drive. It could boot windows but would BSOD shortly thereafter. So I was relegated to using my craptop, which could accomplish basic web usage if you cleared the cache every two minutes. It effectively severed me from Wastebook. By employing roughly 17 filters, unfollowing everyone I knew, and removing the newsfeed entirely, FB became mildly functional.
Steemit, on the other hand, clunky though it is... (Steempeak is far better) came through just fine. I went ahead and created a new FB for no purpose other than following cultural and anthropology groups. For which it is still rather well suited. Yesterday, I managed to install Kubuntu on the desktop and surprise, surprise... it is a delight as well.
#blessingsindisguise
> By employing roughly 17 filters, unfollowing everyone I knew, and removing the newsfeed entirely, FB became mildly functional.
This made my night, thanks! 😆
Ah, the smell of a fresh new book, or an old musty book! So evocative. I'm glad I grew up with books. I need to go back to reading more - Steemit's become an obsession and I don't think even this is good for me. Give me pre internet days any day - if someone gave me the choice, I'd take it in an instant. I find it funny that none of my friends have contacted me to find out why i'm not on facebook or instagram. Is this because they've left too or are they so distracted by all the things in their feed that I've just drifted to the periphery of their thoughts? Would that happen if I stopped posting on Steemit, too? Ugh. Feeling maudlin. Going home to curl up with a book. Wish I was in Melbourne - you have a far better choice of pubs and cosy eateries to read and just 'be'. I think if I turned up in the Winch pub with a book I'd be given funny looks indeed ;)
I just turn up to pubs and cafes with a book anyway. If it’s ok to read the paper, why not a book?
I’ve found it an interesting exercise of who remains in contact and who doesn’t.
Posted using Partiko iOS
I used to always go to cafes with a book. I just don't seem to have time now. I probably should make the time. I did yesterday over lunch and some annoying woman talk to constantly to her friend very loudly on the phone about relationships and so on. So much for that
Posted using Partiko Android
😆 I saw you wrote that over on the Discord, but it was hours old by the time I went to reply. How’d you deal with it in the end? Did you stick chopsticks in her eyes?
Posted using Partiko iOS
Technology has made us leave that real life and get involved only through the internet and it is very sad.
We stop living, to share with our loved ones for being on the internet so I am very happy to read that you disconnected for a while. I think we should all do it.
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This is a very personal post, glad you felt like sharing it with this platform!
Loved the quotes, btw.
I can relate so much to this "It means I only need to live up to my own expectations (which is tough enough), not those of others." it's so hard to keep our head high when we're constantly thinking it is never high enough. Keep it on!
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Definitely, you put me to reflect. Excellent!!