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Rif Chia
What's fascinating is that your experience is yet another example of how far removed our online experience is from normal people's: here we are bored to death with tools they haven't even heard of yet.
This is really starting to hit home for me since my daughter left for college in Australia, and Skype and iChat have become our primary mode of contact. Suddenly I'm frustrated with the non-geeks among my peers -- i.e., everyone in my real life -- because they're not using chat tools, let alone social tools. And email just seems so slow!
However, think what if everyone had caught on? Then you'd be bombarded and overloaded with information, questions, and responses from every direction. How would you feel about that?
Time passes, the relationship evolves, the honeymoon period ends, and we realise the friendship has changed substantially. Perhaps we don't find Twitter so interesting any more and our friendship fades and passes. Or perhaps we settle into a comfortable style of rapport which doesn't need very much interaction at all. Or perhaps, just maybe the honeymoon doesn't end and the intensity of our initial connection grows into one of those wonderful, life-long partnerships.
There's also a possible comparison with one's relationship with anything which becomes popular, whether it be music, TV shows, books, fashion, ideologies, etc. Popularity decreases the signal-to-noise ratio, so keeping track of the true signal requires more and more effort, or more and more tolerance of the ubiquitous noise.
So what do you do when anything you enjoy starts to lose its appeal?
Sounds like allowing this one to settle into a less frequent but more meaningful style of interaction is a good option for you at this point in time, while you also go find some new friends :)
And Aaron makes a really important point -- at least for the reading part. You've got to find new outlets to inspire you. Just because everyone says we all should be reading person X or Y, doesn't mean we have to. And honestly, FriendFeed and Twitter isn't all there is to life. Granted, your specialty is social media -- so that's what you cover but social media is all around us, everywhere, not just in these places.
I think you'll be alright. Give yourself a break, you've been going at this like gangbusters for a while now. Just take your little breather and then you'll be revived.
It's not an arms race.
All the best!
I've been experiencing the same malaise, and when managing/reporting/participating in all this is your job, it becomes really hard knowing how to handle it.
One thing that's still been at least somewhat interesting to me, when I've had time, is to devote some brain power to thinking about some of this online stuff, but think about it from a completely different perspective (often completely non-technically). Comparisons and contrasts of ideas of community with different cultures I'm familiar with, etc. It's helped me stretch away from the same ol' same ol' a bit, and I am hoping helps with the writer's... ennui? (Not block, exactly.)
While this is new for me, I think it's got to happen to anyone who lives online a lot, whether for work, pleasure, or both. Keeping an eye on those who're far more immersed than I am and seeing how they deal or disconnect I hope will help me figure out my best balance, too.
Whether it was exploring different genres of music to create/listen to, blogging, books I was reading...anything. Sometimes it benefits you to take a step back from your life, examine it, and then tackle it from a different angle :)
I think a perfect writing job is one where you are able to explore your passions and not limit your blog to one niche or aspect of a niche. I think social media sites, tools, or gadgets are cool. But by just reiterating information there is only a certain level of value that you can potentially create. I think it is funner to at least explore new ways of using tools, or mashing them together to solve a problem. At the end of the day I'm not happy if I am not attempting to create value...no matter what I am doing.
I think people become really repetitive when they worry about stats, worry about publicity (and try and write open letters to the internet instead of some real thought provoking content), or worry about sounding stupid. Lately I've found that when none of that matters, I end up with some of my best stuff.
In fact, to shake things up even more, would love it if you would guest post as well. :)
Shegeeks@shegeeks.net
I think a number of us feel the same, Corvida. Sometimes things just need to get mashed up a bit or, more likely, something new and worthwhile needs to come along.
I respect your intent to only post when you think there's something worth posting.
If I get too desperate, maybe I'll just go through my neighborhood throwing rocks through people's windows. That's news, right?
Reading about blogging and social media can only get old.
Surely we have more things in life that interest us other than social media/tech. I find I've been spending a lot more time IRL than online lately.