Life Without Social Media . . .
By Tom Foremski - January 13, 2009
[I got this note from Adrian Chan recently and I asked his permission to share it on SVW. I'm a big proponent of "turning offline," it is the only antidote to ADD and it helps me think and get some work done. I spend large blocks of time every day not checking email, facebook, twitter, sms, voicemail, etc.
- - -Please see:Ad hoc greetings to you all, and a happy new year!
I want to apologize for missing out on communication for the past couple wks. I did something I havent done since the new millenium -- I was off the computer for 2 wks. Well, with a couple teeny tiny exceptions to download email and use google maps. I turned off my phone, hauled out a couple dozen books of philosophy and theory, and sat down for a good old-fashioned reading vacation at home.
I can tell you, it was interesting. It took a day to forget about twitter. Two days to forget about facebook. Three days to forget about Cnn.com. At three days one's ability to read without distraction really picks up, and by the end of the first wk I could sit without moving for several hours, and read 50 plus pages easily without so much as getting up to stretch.
Constant and daily use of tools like twitter definitely has consequences for the mind! I'm communication sensitive, meaning that as soon as I see a message, I begin to answer or respond or comment on it, in my mind, and so being offline was a real treat. Eliminating the phone seals the experience -- it's strange how aware one is of the possibility that somebody may call, and even turning off the phone didn't get rid of that entirely. But I'm not joking that by the end of the 2 wks I was pretty ambivalent about turning everything back on again... We're not aware of what social media do until we take them away.
On that note, I'm back now and looking forward to a productive -- and hopefully inspiring -- year with you all!
cheers,adrian
Adrian Chan's blog:
A Social Interaction Design (SxD) blog on Web 2.0 and Social Media
SVW:
Maladies of Internet 2.0: Conversation Overload is Worse than Information Overload Share with Bit.ly
January 13, 2009 | Permalink | Comment | Category: Culture Watch | Subscribe to SVW
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Comments (2)
Hah. Sounds familiar. I was abroad for the holidays and didn't have regular internet connection. iPhone was used only for texts. First few days I needed to breathe into a metaphorical paper bag every few hours. I texted my friends in the US from my iPhone (bill just came: $62 for that first week alone) but then, around day 5, I started to relax and accept that this is just how things are going to be.
When I did get online, I became super productive--no longer wasting hours on twitter and email. I thought that I'll have lost significant business ops doing that but honestly, the world continued to move just as slow--just as fast--and when I finally got back everything fell into place.
Next time I'll have to try making it a real vacation...those 50 book pages with no interruption sound reminiscently sumptuous.
Thank you for this fun read!
Ravit
Posted: January 13, 2009 7:27 PM
Ravit: It's interesting to go offline and it is very rewarding. But it does take guts in today's world when we are expected to be answerable to every email, sms text, IM, Facebook, twit, voicemail and every other tug on our attention.
I think there is a lot of value to be explored in going offline. I hope Adrian will be recognized by future wikiHistorians as a leader of some new movement. I would love to join such a movement.
Posted: January 14, 2009 12:37 AM