Why Make This Public?
In the fall of 2018, I was an architecture student working on my thesis. To help stay focused and waste less time, a friend and I decided to quit social media. At that time, it meant Snapchat, Instagram and Facebook.
Prior to this decision, I had already reduced Instagram posts to only when I had a blog post to go along with it. That website is long gone but the idea that I was “de-valuing” information by scrolling through it for a second at a time has stuck with me. The blog posts were a way to redirect attention of a broad audience to a media where I could explore a topic with sufficient depth. It was fun for a while to have a creative outlet too.
I’ve never re-downloaded Snapchat. I did recently start an Instagram for work, although it’s a slippery slope into old, bad habits. And I’ll probably have a Facebook account as long as my Mom lives, or the platform exists, to be able to stay in touch via a family group chat even though I never post or comment.
That was my problem with all these platforms: I was only a consumer and not a creator.
That ends with this blog.
Even if very few people read it, I want an outlet to share what I’ve learned. To give back. Something that people who are really interested can find and interact with in as healthy of an online environment as possible. If a line or a photo or an idea resonates with you, or you have a question about something — post a comment — that’s why I’ve made this information public.