303 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
303 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
[1]Practice the future →
|
||
|
||
• [2]Reading
|
||
• [3]Writing
|
||
• [4]Thinking
|
||
• [5]About
|
||
• [6]Subscribe
|
||
|
||
[7]
|
||
|
||
A working library is a blog about work, reading & technology by Mandy Brown
|
||
|
||
2024-09-19
|
||
|
||
[8]Coming home
|
||
|
||
What do they do,
|
||
the singers, tale-writers, dancers, painters, shapers, makers?
|
||
They go there with empty hands,
|
||
into the gap between.
|
||
They come back with things in their hands.
|
||
|
||
[9]Le Guin, Always Coming Home, page 74
|
||
|
||
I’ve [10]written before about the restlessness inherent to screens, the
|
||
inability to ever linger or pause or catch your breath. It’s a strangely
|
||
disembodied experience, a sense of ceaseless, rustling motion when nothing is
|
||
moving at all: electrical pulses flash and gasp beneath the oceans, your mind
|
||
strains to catch up, your body remains still save for a few twitching digits,
|
||
the shell that’s left behind when your spirit evacuates for the mirage of
|
||
higher ground. We become as smooth and reflective as the screen itself, all
|
||
glassy surfaces and metallic edges obscuring the hollowness within. No need to
|
||
fantasize about what it might be like to upload your consciousness to the
|
||
machine—most of us are already there.
|
||
|
||
It’s curious, the way we refer to media that comes at us as a stream, whether
|
||
of moving pictures or sentence fragments, as if it were the mere flow of cool,
|
||
fresh water running smoothly and gently at our feet. But all it takes is one
|
||
big storm, and your friendly little stream becomes a gushing torrent of mud and
|
||
debris, strong enough to fling cars and houses out of its path, to smash your
|
||
own fragile body—itself mostly water and so perhaps sympathetic to the display
|
||
of power—against the rocks.
|
||
|
||
One meaning of the verb “distract” is to separate, to draw apart. To separate
|
||
the body from the spirit. To draw apart, or perhaps to draw out, as of a small
|
||
animal lured from its den by the smell of fresh grass, only to be met by dust
|
||
and talons. Another meaning is madness.
|
||
|
||
To step into the stream of any social network, to become immersed in the news,
|
||
reactions, rage and hopes, the marketing and psyops, the funny jokes and clever
|
||
memes, the earnest requests for mutual aid, for sign ups, for jobs, the clap
|
||
backs and the call outs, the warnings and invitations—it can feel like a kind
|
||
of madness. It’s unsettling, in the way that sediment is unsettled by water,
|
||
lifted up and tossed around, scattered about. A pebble goes wherever the river
|
||
sends it, worn down and smoothed day after day until all that’s left is sand.
|
||
|
||
At some point I became acutely aware of a sense of scattering or separation
|
||
whenever I glanced at the socials. As if some part of me, or some pattern or
|
||
vision that I cupped tenderly in my hands, was washed away, wrenched from my
|
||
grasp before I quite realized what it was. I think of the orb spiders I often
|
||
glimpse in my tiny city backyard, delicate webs balanced on two leaves of the
|
||
rhododendron and the stem of a laurel. In my own work, I’m weaving ideas,
|
||
stories, prophesies, metaphors, dreams by the shore of this great, inconstant
|
||
stream, and every so often a wave rises up and swallows the whole affair. I
|
||
can’t predict when a wave will come; I can, at this point, count on it coming.
|
||
|
||
A wise spider would move a little ways away. But not too far, because this is
|
||
where the life is. And so I find myself thinking about how I might get some
|
||
distance, what it means to move uphill a ways, to weave my web safe from the
|
||
spray. To get out of the flood zone. To come home.
|
||
|
||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||
|
||
Some weeks ago, I quietly shipped a new content type on A Working Library, such
|
||
that I am now writing [11]short, [12]social-[13]shaped posts on my site and
|
||
then sending them off to the various platforms. This is not a novel mode of
|
||
publishing, but rather one borrowed and adapted from the [14]POSSE model
|
||
(“publish on your site, syndicate elsewhere”) developed by the IndieWeb
|
||
community. While one of the reasons oft declared for using POSSE is the ability
|
||
to own your content, I’m less interested in ownership than I am in context.
|
||
Writing on my own site has very different affordances: I’m not typing into a
|
||
little box, but writing in a text file. I’m not surrounded by other people’s
|
||
thinking, but located within my own body of work. As I played with setting this
|
||
up, I could immediately feel how that would change the kinds of things I would
|
||
say, and it felt good. Really good. Like putting on a favorite t-shirt, or
|
||
coming home to my solid, quiet house after a long time away.
|
||
|
||
A website is, among other things, a container. The shape of that container both
|
||
constrains and makes possible what goes within it. This is, I think, one of the
|
||
primary justifications for having your own website. Not just so you can own
|
||
your stuff (for some meaning of “ownership,” in a culture in which any
|
||
billionaire can scrape your work without permission and copyright only protects
|
||
the rich). Not just so you have a home base among the shifting winds of the
|
||
various platforms, which rise and fall like brush before the fire. Not just so
|
||
you can avoid setting up camp in a Nazi bar. But also so that you can shape the
|
||
work—so that you can give shape to it, and in that shaping make possible work
|
||
that couldn’t arise elsewhere.
|
||
|
||
I made a decision many years ago to shape my work around the books I read. If
|
||
I’m being completely honest, I don’t recall spending a lot of time thinking
|
||
about that decision or contemplating the consequences of it. It seemed right
|
||
and so I ran with it. But it has since given rise to a kind of scholarship and
|
||
writing that I’m not sure I would have landed on were I writing on some
|
||
all-purpose platform, or fitting my work into someone else’s box. It’s allowed
|
||
me to cultivate the soil to suit my purposes—rather than having to adapt my
|
||
garden to the soil I was given. Not every seed I’ve planted has thrived, of
|
||
course. But after all these years, some are quite hardy, while others have made
|
||
some very rich compost. And I find myself often amazed by what emerges: not
|
||
only the seeds I planted but a great many I never anticipated, connections and
|
||
stories I didn’t see until I was right on top of them, until they were tangled
|
||
at my feet. Dark velvety leaves amid glossy blooms, thorns and small sour
|
||
fruits, vines that weave and climb and show me the way.
|
||
|
||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||
|
||
This is, objectively, a difficult way to publish. There’s a great deal of
|
||
friction between an idea or phrase coming to mind and the words making it out
|
||
into the world. And I don’t mean the writing itself (which, as every writer
|
||
will tell you, is dreadful), but the actual mechanics of sharing that writing.
|
||
I mean, I am the fool who opens their damn terminal every time they want to
|
||
publish; in recent weeks, I have spent a not insignificant number of hours
|
||
writing some absolutely criminal CSS. I cannot, in good conscience, advise this
|
||
path for anyone with sense. But the choice to do so suits my own proclivities:
|
||
a desire to tinker not only with the words but with the strata underneath them,
|
||
and a long-running interest in the material reality of publishing. And more
|
||
often than not, I find that what I need is some friction, some labor, the
|
||
effort to work things out. Efficiency is an anti-goal; it is at odds with the
|
||
work, which requires resistance and tension in order to come into being.
|
||
|
||
This is one of the many reasons why I find the current conversation about [15]
|
||
so-called generative AI so immensely frustrating: there’s all this hype about
|
||
making everything easier and faster, about how we can eliminate all the work
|
||
involved in the making of words and images. But no one arguing for this seems
|
||
to have asked what’s left when the work is gone. What is the experience of
|
||
asking for something to appear and then instantly receiving it? What changes
|
||
between the thought and the manifestation? I fear that nothing changes, that
|
||
nothing is changed in such a making, least of all ourselves. But then, what
|
||
does it mean to be unchanged, for your feet to pass so lightly over the ground
|
||
they don’t so much as disturb the sand? Even the dead make change in the world,
|
||
as their bodies decay and and are transformed into food for beasts and bugs and
|
||
trees. But in eliminating the effort, in refusing the temporality of making,
|
||
the outcome of an “AI”-driven creative process is a phantasm, an
|
||
unsubstantiality, something that passes through the world without leaving any
|
||
trace. A root that twists back upon itself and tries to suck the water from its
|
||
own desiccated veins.
|
||
|
||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||
|
||
There was a time when I felt some resonance between spending time in the social
|
||
stream and doing my own work. As if the movement of the water imparted some
|
||
energy or power I could make use of, and then return. But it’s been a long time
|
||
since I’ve felt that way. I grieve that loss: a great number of my closest
|
||
friends are people I met in the halcyon days of Twitter, and I find I still
|
||
often long for that kind of connection, the ambient awareness of people in
|
||
whose company I felt at home. But I know that longing to be a kind of [16]
|
||
nostalgia, an unrealizable wish to return to a past that never was quite as I
|
||
remember it. I do not want those memories to be a burden, like stones weighing
|
||
down my pockets. I want, instead, to carry them lightly and tenderly, to have
|
||
the fortitude to accept the grief that comes with leaving the past where it
|
||
belongs.
|
||
|
||
A word about the Fediverse is warranted here. I believe that we desperately
|
||
need to be experimenting and developing methods of communication that aren’t
|
||
beholden to either the advertising industry or the brittle egos of
|
||
billionaires. Hitching our means of finding each other and forging
|
||
relationships to those insatiable appetites is to invite scarcity and fear into
|
||
our most intimate alliances. We need room to talk and to take up space, to
|
||
listen and to be heard, to organize ourselves, absent that exponential scale of
|
||
manipulation. And I think that something like the Fediverse, which seeks to
|
||
locate power in small communities, and functions at the level of a protocol
|
||
rather than a company, moves us in the right direction.
|
||
|
||
And yet: as much as the Fediverse is different (the governing structures, the
|
||
incentives, the moderation, the absence of ads and engagement tricks), so much
|
||
of it is also unsettlingly familiar—the same small boxes, the same few buttons,
|
||
the same mechanics of following and being followed. The same babbling,
|
||
tumbling, rushing stream of thoughts. I can’t tell if we’re stuck with this
|
||
design because it’s familiar, or if it’s familiar because we’re stuck. Very
|
||
likely it’s me that’s stuck, fixed in place while everything rushes around me,
|
||
hoping for a gap, a break, a warm rock to rest awhile on. Longing for a mode of
|
||
communication that lifts me up instead of wiping me out.
|
||
|
||
And so I remain at an unresolvable juncture: the intersection of the very
|
||
strong belief that we must experiment with new modes and systems of
|
||
communication, and the certain knowledge that every time I so much as glance at
|
||
anything shaped like a social feed, my brain smoothes out, the web of
|
||
connections and ideas I’m weaving is washed away, and I tumble downstream, only
|
||
to have to pick myself up and trudge heavily through the mud back to where I
|
||
belong.
|
||
|
||
It’s exhausting. It is, at this point in my life, unsustainable. I cannot dip
|
||
into the stream, even briefly, and also maintain the awareness and focus needed
|
||
to do my own work, the work that is uniquely mine. I cannot wade through the
|
||
water and still protect this fragile thing in my hands. And perhaps I owe to my
|
||
continued senescence the knowledge that I do not have time for this anymore.
|
||
Perhaps it’s age that grants the wisdom to know where my attention belongs and
|
||
the discipline to be able to direct it. The great power of a middle-aged woman
|
||
is that she knows where to [17]give her fucks.
|
||
|
||
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
|
||
|
||
Will it be weird, to write this way? Probably. I’m tossing the same words into
|
||
(currently) three totally different networks, each with their own affect and
|
||
moods and characters of the day. I’m keeping my distance, such that I likely
|
||
won’t hear the replies (at least, not with any timeliness) or see the ripples
|
||
my words make, should they make any at all. But maybe we need more weird—not in
|
||
the very recent sense of the word, but in the sense of prophesy or potential, a
|
||
spell or charm, the magic, the wild, the wyrd—that which is becoming, rather
|
||
than that which has already passed us by.
|
||
|
||
In Madeline Miller’s beautiful retelling, the Greek witch-goddess Circe comes
|
||
to understand the difference between her own magic and the greater gods’
|
||
divinity:
|
||
|
||
Let me say what sorcery is not: it is not divining power, which comes with
|
||
a thought and a blink. It must be made and worked, planned and searched
|
||
out, dug up, dried, chipped and ground, cooked, spoken over, and sung.
|
||
|
||
[18]Miller, Circe, page 83
|
||
|
||
Circe is surprised to learn that she loves the work of magic, loves it even
|
||
when it’s infuriating and frustrating, when it’s filthy and exhausting. (The
|
||
reader is not, I think, surprised.) But she doesn’t learn that love until she
|
||
is exiled, left alone on an island, her only companions the birds and lions and
|
||
wild boars. There she comes to see what her sorcery really is. There she goes
|
||
into the gap, and discovers that magic is dirt and muscle, work and will,
|
||
effort and choice.
|
||
|
||
Later, she returns to the world. Not to the world of the gods—which she comes
|
||
to realize is a lifeless place—but to the mortal world, carrying her small
|
||
herbs and potions, her wisdom. But as far as she travels, the island remains
|
||
her home, the place she always comes back to.
|
||
|
||
My own magic is a small one: to write in order to uncover what I think; to
|
||
prefigure a future of work that serves the living; to listen intently as people
|
||
speak aloud a story of themselves that is, in the speaking, being rewritten.
|
||
But it is mine. For too long I have tried to make space for it along the banks,
|
||
to keep one foot in the water, to speak my incantations into the wind while the
|
||
river slips the sediment out from under me and pulls me ever deeper.
|
||
|
||
No longer.*
|
||
|
||
Related books
|
||
|
||
[19]Always Coming Home
|
||
|
||
Ursula K. Le Guin
|
||
|
||
[20][le-guin-al]
|
||
|
||
An archeology of the future.
|
||
|
||
[21]Circe
|
||
|
||
Madeline Miller
|
||
|
||
[22][miller-cir]
|
||
|
||
This is a subversive and triumphant retelling of the story of Circe, daughter
|
||
of the sun-god Helios.
|
||
|
||
Newsletter
|
||
|
||
Occasional reading notes delivered to your inbox
|
||
|
||
Email address [23][ ] [25][subscribe]
|
||
• [26]RSS
|
||
• [27]Colophon
|
||
• [28]Copyright © 2008-2024 Mandy Brown
|
||
• [29]mandy@aworkinglibrary.com
|
||
• [30]@aworkinglibrary
|
||
|
||
|
||
References:
|
||
|
||
[1] https://everythingchanges.us/
|
||
[2] https://aworkinglibrary.com/reading
|
||
[3] https://aworkinglibrary.com/writing
|
||
[4] https://aworkinglibrary.com/thinking
|
||
[5] https://aworkinglibrary.com/about
|
||
[6] https://aworkinglibrary.com/subscribe
|
||
[7] https://aworkinglibrary.com/
|
||
[8] https://aworkinglibrary.com/writing/coming-home
|
||
[9] https://aworkinglibrary.com/reading/always-coming-home
|
||
[10] https://aworkinglibrary.com/writing/out-of-time
|
||
[11] https://aworkinglibrary.com/thinking/202408071000
|
||
[12] https://aworkinglibrary.com/thinking/202408301732
|
||
[13] https://aworkinglibrary.com/thinking/202409090848
|
||
[14] https://indieweb.org/POSSE
|
||
[15] https://aworkinglibrary.com/writing/smoke-screen
|
||
[16] https://aworkinglibrary.com/writing/who-we-wish-to-become
|
||
[17] https://aworkinglibrary.com/writing/unified-theory-of------
|
||
[18] https://aworkinglibrary.com/reading/circe
|
||
[19] https://aworkinglibrary.com/reading/always-coming-home
|
||
[20] https://aworkinglibrary.com/reading/always-coming-home
|
||
[21] https://aworkinglibrary.com/reading/circe
|
||
[22] https://aworkinglibrary.com/reading/circe
|
||
[26] https://aworkinglibrary.com/feed/index.xml
|
||
[27] https://aworkinglibrary.com/colophon/
|
||
[28] https://aworkinglibrary.com/copyright/
|
||
[29] mailto:mandy@aworkinglibrary.com
|
||
[30] https://mstdn.social/@aworkinglibrary
|