Michael H Goldhaber on Tue, 2 Sep 2003 18:39:27 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> blog blog failure |
Well, nettimers, I wrote the following blog, but then I thought, you would probably be more interested in it than the average inhabitant of the blogsphere; so though it's own my new blog site ( http://blogs.salon.com/0002859/ ), why waste it? so here it is: Best, Michael Michael H. Goldhaber My very own Blog! Wow! Yesterday, at a party, I mentioned to a friend that I now have a blog, and she said “Be careful!” she then explained that as a therapist she hears her clients evidently being sucked into the Internet. I imagine this to be like one of those two-dimensional creatures in Edward Abbot’s Flatland disappearing as parts of them are sucked into the third dimension. (There another limb goes, into cyberspace....). I reminded her that she was supposed to congratulate me on my blog, which, properly cued, she then did.... So here I am typing away for my legion of readers, though probably there aren't any. Still, like every other blogger I'm sure, I secretly imagine the entire planet eagerly sitting down to my latest addition with your morning coffee, tea, whiskey, water, alfalfa juice or whatever, far more interested in what I have to say than in your dull boring newspaper, or spouse or pet or child, or even your own blog, which you yourself could be writing between sips if you weren't so busy reading mine. When everyone on earth has finally seen the light and started a blog, then probably the average number of readers for each blog will approach the magic number zero (except for one's own re-readings, if any). But still, even if the hit counter shows you as you start your blog each day that no one has read your latest effort, it's difficult to feel, as you send your work out over the Internet to the blog server, that no one is ever going to read what you wrote. After all, one day, thr5ough some Google search or other, this blog might be discovered, and more and more people will link to it, so that even my past blogs will be read by many, preserved as they ought to be for eternity in cyberspace (the blogs, that is, not the people, but yet the people who blog will also be preserved to the extent they put themselves in their blogs) . Now one could just as well imagine writing things on scraps of paper and letting the wind carry them off, hoping someone somewhere will read them. Or perhaps one could tack the scraps up to telephone poles near crowded sidewalks. But the technology of the Internet offers a greater potential: we all know that some web sites do get millions of hits; why not this one? The result, writing a blog definitely presents the illusion that one has a substantial audience, say half the size of the largest potential audience, splitting the difference, that is, between what could be and what most likely is. Seems like a sound calculation, if you don't think about it too much. All this illustrates to me, vividly and firsthand, the phenomenon I call "illusory attention." It occurs all over the place, in many forms in modern life. One of the purest cases is when you are watching someone speaking directly into the camera on television. She may seem to be speaking directly to you, even answering a question you have just silently put to her, but of course she is paying you as a person not the slightest real attention, since she doesn't know you exist. At the opposite, equally common extreme, perhaps, you are talking to your lover, right into her ear, perhaps, on some deeply intimate subject, while she is secretly thinking about renewing her car insurance, and you are none the wiser. To be sure, every human attempt at getting attention, whatever it may be, founders to some degree. No two people understand words in exactly the same way, or gestures or any other form of expression either, so we are never completely perfectly heard. Just as modern technology enables the illusory attention offered by a sympathetic-seeming talking head over TV, so the Internet, with its personal web sites, listservs, chat rooms, and now blogs , makes the illusion of one's outpourings reaching an audience seem far more real than tossing the scraps of paper (or just whispering) into the wind would lead to. And we do want attention. The knowledge that there is a huge audience out there apparently enhances the chances that someone who perfectly gets what I have to say -- yet without having thought of it yet yourself -- is reading this. You , perhaps. That prospect is so pleasing. Of course, though a close reader will see that I am very intimately revealing myself in the foregoing, this blog lacks the kind of personal revelation many blogs apparently have. (I really am not sure about this, since I have only ever read three or four blogs by anyone else. As with all of us, I suspect, writing my own blog seems so much more interesting, and in fact, carries for me a greater charge of illusory attention; which is another deeply personal admission, so there!). Freud spoke of the the train's carrying his child away necessitating the telephone to bring her [voice] back. In a similar manner as we have more walls between us, and thus more isolation, we need all the more to reveal ourselves more fully in some other way. Why do we have more walls? At least in America, it is because we live in far bigger houses, per capita, than a generation or two ago. Most middle class children can now expect not only private bedrooms, but private bathrooms. Even many couples have no need to share a bathroom. If we didn't indulge ourselves this way, the old economy, the one I refer to as the “money-industrial economy,” would be in much worse shape. We haven't found a way yet to export construction-ndustry jobs (unlike factory or tlemarketing or software-writing jobs) . Constructon is more and more devoted to private housing. It is one of the few jobs not demanding a college education that still pays well. So we all are moving towards living in mansions, or being destitute, according to the weird dictates of the old economy in its death throes. One of the main ways of staying in the top half is now, in fact, judiciously getting attention. A simile I have used elsewhere is that while the old industrial-era ruling class wanted to live in houses with one-way glass windows from which they could see out but no one else could see in, now things are reversed. To get attention, you have to put your life on display. See the National Enquirer, or even the New York Times, for ample examples. That requires turning the one-way glass around , the ideal being to be seen without having to waste one's attention in seeing hoi polloi more than necessary. With blogs, we can all aspire to this. I'm no different,even if I am judicious in concluding that my sex life is not likely to interest anyone, not even a cloistered nun (who probably is not on the Internet anyway) but perhaps my mental life might. Okay, Okay, please don't bother writing to say the brain is the chief sex organ. I know this; in fact the foregoing is obviously pure porno, as pure as one can get. By the time you are through having orgasms over this, who knows, my next blog may be up. You could check anyway. -- Best, Michael Michael H. Goldhaber PH 1-510 339-1192 FAX 1-510-338-0895 MOBILE 1-510-610-0629 mgoldh@well.com http://www.well.com/user/mgoldh/ What have I learned in all these years, by way of wisdom? Most importantly, I would say the notion that we humans came into a world without meaning, but we invented meaning; it is to us to give things, including ourselves what meaning we choose to give, and though our power to do that is not unlimited, it is the most difficult and most important power we possess, a task we can never successfully assign to others, and can hardly avoid, a task that is always open before us, and one in which there are no predetermined right answers, and quite possibly not even any absolutely wrong answers, much as I would like there to be. The world is not a book we can read, but our very existence as humans makes it a book we can--and inevitably do--write. # 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