The internet has changed drastically over the last few years. In the early days, it felt busy and exciting, and you felt very connected with all of these new people who suddenly appeared from all over the world. We were all united on a journey within this fabulous new tool called the internet. There was so much interaction. It was so easy to promote your book, or your latest YouTube video, or posts on your social sites. It was so easy to make new friends, to share experiences, to develop creative relationships. It was FUN.
Then along came the algorithm.
Eveything changed. The new world created within the internet felt like it was rapidly shrinking, it was being constricted. Contact became more and more minimal, as though some invisible hand had come down to intervene between our connections. It suddenly became taboo to talk about your new book, or a video, or a blog post, or a website. They began calling it "self-promotion" and it was prohibited on more and more social media groups, social sites, and networks. And then came the age of "paid promotion". Give us your dollar and we'll spread your image and your opinions and your products and your services to a select few.
And always, lurking in the shadows was the algorithm, like some jealous and destructive aquaintance who wanted to confine your internet experience to your own computer. We were cut off from all the people, and experiences, and social sites, and networks that we had enthusiastically built and cultivated and breathed to life.
This week I made a concious decision to stop worrying about the algorithm. I have come to terms with the new reality of the internet and to understand that I cannot control it, but better yet, I will not allow it to control me.
I will write books because there is something I need to say, or proclaim, or reveal. I will write books because I love writing, and I love holding the finished product in my hand, warmed by the sense of accomplishment. I will continue to create videos because I derive pleasure in the process, and I derive satisfation at viewing the completed project. I will continue blogging because my blog is as personal and dear to me as a physcial leather-bound, weathered, and tattered old journal. I will step back from social sites and networks that feed me algorithmic posts and steal my time and attention.
I will stop worrying about the algorithm and enter the internet world on my own terms, in my own way, defining who I am, what I enjoy, and how I choose to interact with the world at large and people near and dear to me. Within our blogs and videos and books and social connections, I will reclaim what I enjoy and love and watch and interact with.
Lack of transparency:
Social media impact:
Fear of control:
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