The Gods of the Copybook Headings
As I pass through my incarnations in every age and race,
When all men are paid for existing and no man must pay for his sins,
As surely as Water will wet us, as surely as Fire will burn,
If I were prone to attend an affinity church it would be something like:
The Church of Saint Clarence Odbody
formerly known as
The Church of the Blessed Mess
It would have a sign (probably misspelled):
“Welcome to the screwups, the not-good-enoughs, the awkwards and clumsies. Welcome to the morons, the barely-made-its, and the can’t-you-be-on-times. Welcome to the criticized, mocked, and ignored.
Don’t expect that it will be better here, but we’re broken too.
So perhaps we can share our brokenness.”
The proverb runs:
"Surely in vain the net is spread in the sight of any bird."
-yet for the most part we are not as clever as a bird.
***
To paraphrase some one much wiser than I:
"If service on the internet is free, you are likely the product being sold."
***
The problem with the internet is not Facebook, Twitter, or Google. The problem is not liberal media bias or right-wing misinformation. The problem is not corporate censorship or hands off governance.
The problem is each of us.
We want to be acknowledged and liked. Some trolls thrive mostly on conflict, but always on acknowledgement or validation.
Facebook (and others) figured out how to exploit normal human psychological responses. (Anyone remember Maslow's hierarchy?) They make the most addictive brew of the posts of friends and acquaintances. They monetize our screen-time on their respective platforms. So the content is optimized to draw us in. It is to morality and reason as refined sugar is to normal food.
Our problem is that we respond, we participate for a billion different reasons, yet we respond. Individually as unpredictable as atoms, yet corporately we are as controllable as the temperature of a teapot.
***
The answer to the internet of cancel-culture, hoaxes, twitter-mobs is the diffuse internet. Avoid services that pander to your prejudices. Test to see if what you have searched/watched/discussed becomes noticeable in advertisements. If it does change platforms. Change browsers. Use smaller services. If you must maintain contact with that special whomever, use a telephone, email, other services.... Find smaller servers and services. Make your services discreet, and your acquaintances and curiosity broad.
If you are technically capable, stand up your own server. If not, do what you can in the least encumbered manner. Avoid monocultures.
Further ideas accepted below for consideration.
Book shopping, digging through the stacks, picking out one, turning over to survey, opening to scan and smell, moving on... is as physical and aspirational an occupation as working the dirt of a garden.
December last year I and my youngest daughter went to a bookstore while shopping for presents. Wandering the stacks and browsing books I realized that book shopping (not necessarily buying, certainly not just ordering online) was what had been missing from my Christmas preparations. I then felt on some level emotionally ready for Christmas to come: the physicality of bookshopping had been fulfilled.
***
When we moved to this small town there was a bookstore in the mall. A chain bookstore opened up with an espresso bar. Then within a short time both bookstores closed. There have been a couple of attempts at running used bookstores in town, but they have gone away also.
Now "local bookstore" means somewhere over an hour away.
Local physical stores of interest (by which I mean lots of used books):
***
Confession: Although physical bookstores are so much delight to to explore, I enjoy the convenience of online book shopping also.
Online sellers:
Amazon of course...
AbeBooks the eclectic side of the Amazon Organism
BookShop.org is new to me. It seems to be benevolent but only things in the Ingram catalog are available for sale.
Powell's I include somewhat nostalgically.
***
Do you have any favorite bookstores or book shopping memories?