Tom Sherman on 21 Dec 2000 16:50:04 -0000 |
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<nettime> I GET TIRED |
I ADMIT I GET TIRED OF MANAGING INFORMATION I get tired of managing information all the time. It would be nice to just let go a little more. To go with the flow. I used to have a life after work. I was paid a salary to keep things organized in the office. When things were crazy busy it was my job to follow procedures to keep things moving and in tip-top shape. When things were quiet my partners encouraged me to stir things up, then to put things back in order before I'd go home. That's what white collar workers have always done--they use telephones and computers to manage information, to stir things up and to put things back in order. My life got more complicated when I got hooked up at home. I set up a desktop and started working in the evenings and on weekends. I found I could straighten out the messes I'd make at work in my free time at home. I could get a lot more done by extending the office into my time off. I resisted the laptop thing because I needed some time to think, and commuting was the only time I had for myself. It seems like I've always carried a cell phone on the road, for peace of mind. I use it mainly to keep in touch with my partners and family. I seldom initiate any business when I'm on the road. I know this goes against the grain. I do answer work related calls and react when I have to. Mostly I listen to music and read novels. I do like to talk with my mother when I'm commuting. The other day I realized how sick I am of managing information. I feel like a damned cleric or a librarian. Most of my waking hours are spent opening and closing files, putting things back in order, hacking away at the snarl of traffic in my inbox, launching reassuring messages in response. Staying in touch with people I hardly know. I really thought my life's work would be more creative. I thought I'd be the one making the messes--interesting, vital messes. Instead I find I'm merely an extension of this year's software. I use the latest, most powerful software as a template for my highly efficient, productive behavior. I'm consistent, methodical, and orderly. There are loose-ends, but these loose-ends dangle in the never-never land beyond the control of the system, the network...somewhere beyond my desktop. I think about these loose ends when I'm commuting, between the time spent lost in my music, or in my novels, or talking to my mother. Tom Sherman # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net