I
What we do online is
real to the people who care about us.
We live a lot of our lives online. We have conversations,
flirtations, and even whole relationships online, and much of it is done in plain
sight. We’re exhibitionists.
We’re also voyeurs. We watch each other and speculate about
conversations and goings on that float through our feeds. We seek emotional
cues from and try to assess where we stand in the lives of those we care about,
be they friend, crush, or colleague.
And though we accept the exhibitionism, we scoff at the
voyeurism. It’s something we’ve decided should be shameful. “Creeping,”
“lurking,” and “stalking” are the verbs we use for the audience half of our
performer-audience activities.
When something posted online causes a reaction, we say, “It’s
just Twitter,” or, “It’s just Facebook,” as if the medium is reason enough to
dismiss the message and its accompanying response.
Our friend confides, “I know I shouldn’t care, but...” But
he unfriended you, and it really fucking hurts. Why shouldn’t you care about
that?
It hurts to see you’re not invited to the party. It hurts to
see your love flirting with others. It hurts to see a peer get your dream job.
Our online lives are realities—sometimes the only realities
people can see. By shaming voyeurism, we’re distancing ourselves from the
emotional consequences our online activities have on others. We’re shirking responsibility.
II
When we live so much
of our lives online, are we creating barriers to intimacy?
Of course, we’re putting a layer of technology between us
and other people. More than that, we’re throwing bits of ourselves out to the
world, casting a wide net of charm and flirtation. Within the context of an
established long-term relationship, this may be fine and healthy. But what
about those of us seeking to establish intimacy? The gap between “getting to
know” and “intimate” seems to be widening, and it’s getting increasingly
difficult to bridge.
We carry fragile egos, so we simultaneously look for signs
that we matter to others while also being careful not to give too much away.
Voyeur brain scans their feed for something—anything—that
will indicate they’re thinking about us as much as we’re thinking about them.
Seeing nothing, our exhibitionist brain is careful to only post things that
clearly communicate we are happy, complete, and successful individuals who
couldn’t possibly care about the amazing date we had last night, which is so
totally unimportant it won’t be mentioned or alluded to in any way whatsoever
while we’re busy demonstrating our desirability by ostentatiously flirting with
this guy over here.
We affect cool so we won’t appear overzealous and leave
ourselves vulnerable for rejection. It’s a classic losing scenario, amplified
by 1,000 thanks to the very public nature of social media.
III
It’s hard to trust a
persona.
Twitter, for me, is a playground. I exorcise demons and
exercise hyperbole. I’m liberal with emotions, and I’m flexible with fact. I
firehose affection to anyone and everyone—sometimes genuine, sometimes ironic.
I tweet exactly what I’m feeling, and I tweet the opposite of what I’m feeling.
I tweet jokes. I tweet ideas. I tweet nonsensical babblings. I tweet anything
and everything, and I don’t really give much thought to a “personal brand.”
Twitter is performance art. I play a persona, and it’s sort
of a shattered-mirror reflection of who I really am. The trouble is (and the
beauty is) that I successfully confound people and make it difficult for them
to know where I stand or where they stand with me.
For an artist, to see evidence that what you’re doing has
any effect on people is a thrill. But for a human, it’s lonely to be
misunderstood and difficult to trust.
IV
What needs to change?
Intimacy in the age of social media requires commitment. If
you want to get someone across the bridge from casual partner to lasting love,
you have to be willing to sacrifice and be vulnerable. You have to become
trustworthy in order to be trusted.
For me, that likely means a dramatic shift in my Twitter behaviors, sacrificing a large portion of what I’ve come to consider my art. For most, it probably just means heightened conscientiousness, putting yourself under the intense scrutiny of someone who’s trying to win your affection.
If we can admit that people are watching us, that what we do
affects them, and that real intimacy requires vulnerability and trust—and if
we’re willing to change based on that knowledge—we may just have a shot at
intimacy, after all.
4 comments:
This is amazing.
That is all.
Thank you, Stephen.
Awesome. Twitter is living your life out loud or at a whisper.
Thanks! Well said.
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