Facebook is What Happens when God Smokes a Bowl with the Devil

Thursday, July 17, 2008 | comments (8)
I have to do it. I'm sorry. I've put it off for months. I've told myself I should not write about it. That I should put it out of my mind for good. That the subject has been beaten to death by millions of us blogger types all over the overcrowded and puffed up blogo-verse-osphere. And yet there it is—a shadow of a thought. Lurking like a small furry chipmunk at the edge of its dark little chipmunk hole in my mulched and weeded beds, curious to poke its head out, but at the same time shy and self-conscious and worried I'll chop it's little fucking chipmunk head clean off. Or that Honey will eat him.

I'd like to think that God had the best of intentions when he created chipmunks. But even God has days when he feels a little ornery, and all he feels like doing is kicking back and letting off some steam. So he invites Old Scratch over to his place and they smoke a couple of bowls and play a little XBox. And, over a heated game of Madden 2010 (they get advance copies of software) they think up ways to piss people off, or ruin Jason Lee's career. And the next morning God wakes up refreshed, clear-headed, and alone, and he goes to his window and sees what he's done ... that now there are chipmunks. Or Daschunds. Or people who drive Hummers. Or ... Backstreet Boys. And he just shakes his head and curses Old Scratch and decides he will love these things anyway.

I am on the verge of this kind of mistake.

Do not do it, says my Rational Side.

This will shame you.

You will regret it.

You will feel cheap and dirty.

Oh, Rational Side. You are so clever when you betray me. You and Irrational Side are in cahoots, aren't you? You know that the very arguments you use against my behavior will eventually send me hurdling frantically toward it.

You are a Brutus.

Fucking backstabber.

Geez, man. Come on! What's all this build-up about? Have out with it already, Dave!

Okay, okay. Sorry.

It's Facebook. The big "FB." The cherry-filled donut, moist with gluteny, glazed goodness. The turkish delight, lightly dusted with powdered sugar. The raging shot of Patron, warm and smooth, at 2am. And I hate you, Facebook. With all my heart I hate you. And yet I can't ignore you. I can't stop eyeing your pages. I can't stop myself from checking you once or twice or thrice a day to see if one of the 75 or so friends I sit amongst has posted some morsel about what they are up to so I can pop it back and swallow it without really tasting it. FB, you've turned my friendship with these people into some kind of non-stop tapas meal. Only it's one where most of the time is spent watching other people eat. Because real communication, real meals with substance, rarely occur.

I think Jeff said it best in one of my favorite posts by him when he refers to yoga as "the Facebook of physical activity, an anesthetic for life spent next to people without ever really communicating."

The people I'm friends with on FB are generally people I know—or have known at one point in my life—fairly well. They're people I've shared common interests with. I think with the exception of a few, they are people who I've known "in real life" before I knew them "online." And it's great when I get re-connected with them. But then, like some massive yoga class, there we are, inches from one another, all getting off on our own thing, finding our six chakras, discovering our power animals, and not really talking or even acknowledging each other.

Let me be clear: I'm not pointing any fingers here. I'm just as guilty of this as anybody. (All I usually do on FB is re-post the things I write here.) Nobody's at fault here. FB just works this way. It's kind of what the medium encourages: for us all to become voyeuristic spectators of each-others existence. And who am I to judge that kind of thing? I mean, I keep a very public blog in which I sometimes talk about my very private life. Why? I'm not sure. But here's an attempt to figure it out.

The thing is, I feel like I want something more from Facebook. To me, the value of FB, or any other online social-networking tool, should be to bring us back together in the real world. If a person is not somebody I'd realistically hang out with in a bar or a coffee shop, then I don't see much point to seeing them every day on Facebook. But what about playing games, Dave? You don't have to be best friends to play a game of Scrabulous with somebody. I could see where the games would be sorta fun for people. But I never liked Scrabble when it was something you played on a board, so I definitely do not want it on my computer screen. I do see some value in being able to share book and movie interests. But even with that, it's really not about communication is it? People rarely actually write anything about the movies or books they list. So the recommendations lack context. What they lack is a conversation.

Basically, here's the central irony I've found with FB: Sometimes I wind up feeling less close to people after we've gotten connected on FB then I felt before, even if I hadn't seen that person in years. I mean if the person is somebody you haven't spoken to in a while, then there's this very wide gulf of time between you where all of these things have happened in your lives and you can't just get caught up on that shit by writing a couple of sentences on a "wall-to-wall." So instead, you just say nothing. And so then, there they are: in front of you every day, virtually closer than they've been in years. And yet—because you haven't really communicated with them—they're further away than they ever were before. They become almost like a neighbor that you see from over a fence every day and with whom you don't ever really talk about anything meaningful. Instead, you yell one-liners at each other about how it's really freakin' hot today or man, the Yankees are sucking some ass this year, aren't they? And how are you supposed to respond to these things? You can't. So you shrug and you pull up another window with your work in it, the stuff you're supposed to be doing but don't want to, and you go back to your life.

And now your most recent memory of this friend you haven't seen in 15 years is that they just had Cheerios for breakfast. Or that they are power-washing their house today. And you might like to ask them, how did that power-washing thing go? But you don't. Not because you don't care, but because what you really want to ask them is, "how have the last 15 years been?" But that's too much to bite off in a status update. And, oops, an email just came in which you have to answer, so you reckon' you'll ask about that power-washing thing some other time.

But you never do.

Despite the negativity here, and contrary to the title of this post, I don't actually think Facebook is a mistake. It's a really great app, and I've always thought that. I love how it connects you with people. I also love it from a professional standpoint, for the way it encourages open development, and how it's clean and polished. But the thing is this: It's a good app, but it is just an app. It's an app that connects people. That's it. And the trick is to not let it turn your friendships into endless tapas ... or yoga.

Ahh ... so there it is: My Inevitable Facebook Post. Until now, you could search my site and not find one reference to FB, which kind of surprised me when I realized that. But not anymore. I've entered the din of conversation, even though the Internets never asked for it, or cared.

And I guess I don't feel as dirty as I thought I would. Which is kind of disappointing.

In the end, this wasn't nearly as bad as, say, ... chipmunks. Or Daschunds. Oh well. Maybe next time.

First, I've got to find somebody with an XBox. And a couple of bowls in need of smoking.

link to this | comments (8) | File: 

« Opening for Coldplay, Not Me ... Another Dave
My Dog Deserves a Bad-Ass Theme Song »




Comments

I am sure not the point and I haven't read his post, but I think your friends misses the point of yoga.

I am with you though. Damn facebook. Damn good interface and incredible use of ajax.

And watch it with the Daschunds! Frankie is part. She'll cut you!

How's Jersey? Working on that accent?

Hope to catch up this week!

Posted by Mr. Emily on Jul 18, 2008 at 12:40:37 AM
Wait a minute ... there's a point to yoga?

Oops. I thought Frankie was all Beagle. Sorry about that.

My Jersey accent is as bad as it ever was, durn it. Need to work on that.

Posted by rothko on Jul 18, 2008 at 7:41:58 AM
I challenge you to take a Bikram yoga class. You won't do any talking but you will bond with others through hot glorious pain that exhausts you while it is happening but leaves you fully energized.

As for facebook I liked it a first but now, meh.

Posted by Kim on Jul 19, 2008 at 7:17:45 PM
I can understand the "bonding through pain" thing from swimming. Perhaps I was a little harsh on the yoga. As for your challenge, I think I've learned to be careful of accepting challenges from you.

And, darnit, "meh" is about as good a description of FB as there is. I wish I had thought of that. It would have saved ya'll a bunch of reading.

Posted by rothko on Jul 21, 2008 at 8:04:36 AM
And yet Facebook allows me to discover that a dude I met on the burgeoning internets in 1992 and re-met while he was working for a big corporation making websites with my then-boyfriend is FRIENDS WITH MY LANDLORD and has CRAPPED IN MY TOILET (okay, technically your toilet, but I crap in it every day, sometimes more than once, which is probably information that a landlord never needs to know about his tenant). Facebook is magic. Like Jesus.

Posted by KateR on Jul 21, 2008 at 4:41:55 PM
I would hope you crap in that toilet every day, because I shudder to think of the alternative.

The dude you're referring to was cleansing during one of his visits, so he probably did way worse things in that toilet than you and I ever have ... actually, maybe not ... anyway, if one could ever love a toilet, then I loved that one, with it's industrial-strength, sloan-valve goodness. Now matter what you did to (and in) it, it always flushed down in one easy flush.

Okay, now maybe I'm the one saying too much ...

Posted by rothko on Jul 22, 2008 at 8:09:28 AM
It's true, we've never clogged it. YET. (I smell a challenge... and it smells strangely of sulfur.)

Posted by KateR on Jul 25, 2008 at 1:44:48 PM
Also I don't work at home like you, you jerk, so sometimes I crap here.

Posted by KateR on Jul 25, 2008 at 1:45:50 PM
Comments: Rss Icon




Yes 
No

  

Related Posts

In Chewing . . .

11.24.2008
Paul wrote on my wall: We're almost halfway to 70. How do you feel? I wrote back: When I look at it that way ... not good.

11.03.2008
Despite what you may have heard, I am not a dog. I walk upright. I understand the truth about mirrors. I'm a reasonably intelligent guy. And I can do any number of tricks. But I've got these mistakes I keep making. I've made them as long as I can remember, and I've yet to learn the trick of how to stop.

09.30.2008
My friend Steph once told me she thought I was "well grounded." I thought she was crazy for saying that since I was the most ungrounded person I knew. But I never argued with her about it. I liked that she saw something else in me and I let her.

09.11.2008
I decided to pay David a visit last weekend and find out why his blog had been silent for the past month. The site had gone dark, and it had me worried. I went armed with a pen and a pocket-sized pad to take notes. I didn't know what I would find. But I knew there was a possibility it wouldn't smell very good.

06.18.2008
And as I did it, I thought it would probably be tragic for my dad to watch me fall to my death while using the housewarming gifts he bought me. And it would have been. Tragic. But it didn't happen that way. That's not how I got bruised.

04.28.2008
And I keep thinking that maybe one day I'll peel back that one final layer and I'll be able to see clearly and say with some authority that this, this is Clarence ... but the bottom line is I will never know this man. I will die and he will remain a mystery to me.

03.25.2008
If you look closely at the backyard of your soul, you'll find a shed. And it's something you've gazed at a million times before and it's always remained closed and mysterious, and surrounded by ice. Familiar, but strange. Holding so much promise, but surrounded by challenge and danger.

03.12.2008
Last week, I stepped out of my comfort zone a bit and joined a group called Thirty-Something Bloggers.

03.04.2008
And, on the other side, Harleys rumbling in the parking lot. Tattoos on display. Double D moms with "Don't Be Jealous" t-shirts. Suburban grey-beard banker bikers, bandana'd and leather-vested and flaunting their mid-life crises a month or two early.

02.22.2008
There are a million and one reasons not to do something. But they all usually amount to one thing: fear. And let me just say that I've got some of the fear and some of the dread when it comes to this thing I've started, "Fiction Fridays."


In Blog . . .

08.01.2008
One of the things I love most about having work to do is that it forces me to procrastinate. I like to say that it gives my procrastination purpose. And one of my favorite ways to procrastinate with purpose is to add new features to this blog.

05.06.2008
The memes have been flying all over the place lately. And I got hit in the crossfire. Twice. One in each leg. So here we go, six plus seven, plus one. Random/Weird/Quirky.

03.28.2008
I always hoped I'd be saying this under different circumstances, but ... I am completely in Your hands. And since we're still in the lingering twilight hours of Web 2.0, and user-generated content is apparently all the rage, why don't You leave a comment and at the same time satisfy my narcissistic curiosities by answering the same question I posed to Mat: Is there a difference between the "Blog Me" and the "Live and In Person Me?"

03.12.2008
Last week, I stepped out of my comfort zone a bit and joined a group called Thirty-Something Bloggers.

02.22.2008
There are a million and one reasons not to do something. But they all usually amount to one thing: fear. And let me just say that I've got some of the fear and some of the dread when it comes to this thing I've started, "Fiction Fridays."

12.04.2007
You've had this happen. I know you have.

11.02.2007
I've had a few late nights this week. Because it was time for a remodel. And remodels happen best at night. And I just hope my new neighbors don't have sensitive ears. Because my office shares a wall with them. And there have been keyboard taps coming from over here. Lots of 'em.

10.22.2007
I've been reading and re-reading Hemingway lately, partly because I'm just enjoying his style, but partly because I'm hoping to learn, through osmosis, the art of writing while pleasantly pissed. Unfortunately, I haven't had much luck in this pursuit . . .

05.23.2007
Bloggers tend to blog about this subject ad nauseam, particularly people who have just started blogging. So it pains me a bit to go down this road. But what the hell. At the risk of making people sick, I have to now jot down a few words on this here blog about - here it goes - the act of jotting down a few words on this here blog.

05.18.2007
An excellent interview with Matt Mullenweg, WordPress Creator, on the state of blogging.