I am sick of the internet.
Actually, that's quite a heavy statement, so let's clarify. I have been pottering about on MySpace for quite a while now, probably something like 18 months, and perhaps the novelty has started to pall a little. It is quite easy to get started on building a network, really very easy. all you need to do is search a few pages, drop a few comments, and away you go. It's a bit like internet dating - if anyone replies, you can start a conversation, and who knows what will arise from it. Unlike internet dating, you probably will get a reply eventually. That is a subject for seperate bitterness, and I may go into it later.
The thing is, if you are successful in building your network, you have to maintain it. And I find that after an initial series of comments like "lk yr vid of burning nun, ROFLMAO", the initial rush of happiness at finding a new friend subsides. So it's fairly inevitable that of 80-odd friends, you will end up talking regularly to no more than five of them. That has happened. But, finding new friends was not quite why I was on MySpace, at least, not once I had.
I like blogging, you see. I in fact think I might be quite good at it. I was always crap at most of the fun things at school. I preferred English lessons to football, and thought that backies on a BMX were probably more dangerous than useful. I never aspired to popularity, preferring to have a small number of good friends I could rely on rather than a huge circle of loose associates who, if I was lucky, would remember my name.
Happily, this didn't lead to being one of the differently interesting kids at the edge of the school field who talked to themselves and directed their energies to plans of bloody revenge. I would instead sit in the middle of the field talking bollocks with a number of likeminded souls and avoiding the footballs that would fly towards us every six minutes. Not as many girls as I would have liked, but there you go. Being able to quote the dialogue to Monty Python and the Search for the Holy Grail turned out to be less alluring that I thought it was. In such a fashion I passed thirteen years of education, substituting the 6th Form Centre for the grassy field during the last two years.
So what does that have to do with blogging? Well, I was beginning to wonder myself, until I was called away from the computer for a couple of minutes, which jarred me back to what it was I was actually talking about. The point is, MySpace is bad for good writing. Partly it's the site itself, which is horrendously badly coded to begin with, and then riddled afterwards with poorly written HTML page pimps and stuffed with bandwidth-gobbling YouTube films. Click on any page, and the chances are it'll take a good three days to load properly and be unreadbly sparkly once it does. I have an OAP of a computer and it really isn't hip to that jive. See? That's how old my computer is. It deletes my cool contemporary urban and replaces it with stuff from the Fifties.
But secondly, it is relentless. If you get a decent readership, you have to write constantly to keep them happy. And most of them won't stick around if you decide to take a day off. Some will, and I love them all, but a lot won't. I have had various people come and go, just like life, I suppose, but like all things on the internet, it happens a lot faster.
I am becoming old. I am becoming sedate. I don't want to log on every single day and fill E-Space with my whimsical thoughts. Most days I don't have any to begin with, let alone any worth writing down. If I do, they're going to be about something like work, or telly. Everyone rants about telly and things you write about work can be very easily traced back and get you into serious trouble. You hear about that quite a lot. So I'd quite like to be able to write something a bit more considered at my leisure and then not have to worry about people writing back.
I'd still like to be funny, of course. If anyone reads this, you will tell me, won't you?
Good Night, and Good Luck
Dougal
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5 comments:
I have. Finally. And I'll be here, lurking about and waiting patiently.
I can't be bothered either, it's all just become a bit silly. I just like to write what I fancy writing and I think even when you do have lots of subscribers that hang around waiting for you to post something, you begin to feel pressured about what you're writing because half of them don't want to read anything of substance. I'd rather just do my own thing and not have to worry about that.
The internet imitates life in many ways and I also have a small group of very close friends in real life and it's become clear that it'd be nice to have one or two intelligent blog readers than lots of silly ones.
Yes feeding off the inane comments can wane a bit and when you realise you're only responding to them out of politeness and because more comments = a better blog ranking place you know that you're losing the plot a bit.
Besides of which, greater success in the rankings leads only to a greater number of inane comments. It's a vicious circle really isn't it?
Oh and that was a good point about the quoting of Monty Python material. How come it takes all girls a stint at Uni before they'll acknowledge exactly how tremendous M P actually are and how cool I am for liking them since I was ten.
Hopefully this little sojourn to Blogger will help us all recapture a bit of the original magic that drew us to blogging in the first place.
And I always enjoy your wry (a)musings and you knows it.
Er ROFLMAO etc.
I feel better for it already. Look, there's another one...
Hey, I liked Monty Python when I was nine. So I am, like, totally iced out.
Trouble is...now that some of my favorite bloggers have gone elsewhere I have more websites to visit whilst I should be working. Trouble-maker.
I stuck around, phooey on youey. Or some such. ;)
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