Putting clever things done by other people on your FaceBook page and thinking you just communicated with someone is like vomiting up your last meal on someone’s plate and thinking that you just served them a meal…

No… that isn’t quite right… because if you did that, you might at least be regurgitating a meal that you yourself cooked, whereas just recycling the wisdom and humor of others is infinitely worse. It is not any form of communication at all. It is, in fact, at the very least, a form of plagiarism masquerading as interaction.

I have done posts before on the differences between blogging and FaceBooking… how FaceBook is where you go to have friends and family more or less ignore your thoughts while a blog is where you go to have hundreds of strangers tell you how frightfully brilliant you are… but the whole notion of people batch-sending cute stuff they find on the internet and imagining that they have somehow connected to people just makes me unutterably sad.

I suppose this post is a part of the posts I did a few days ago, where, with my patented blend of sarcastic pomposity and sartorial lecturing, I tried to get across the point that so often in modern times, the very rules that we invented to lubricate our social interactions often serve to make them meaningless. The pathways we created to make our conversations go more smoothly have been worn down by the traffic until they have become the walls of a maze of our own design. We walk the well-trodden path, but we no longer see the scenery or look for a new exit to take to explore someplace new.

In short, we are in a rut. Have you ever had three or four people in a row ask you the same standard question of greeting, such as: ‘how are you?’ and then suddenly the next person throws one of the other overused salutations your way, perhaps: ‘what’s new with you?’ and before you can stop yourself, you answer: ‘I’m good’.

No, this is not the end of the world. It isn’t a social disaster. But it is a glaring indication of a deeper problem. It means that, for the most part, we are able to carry on basic prefabricated conversational gambits on autopilot with no thought required at all.

Is this really a god thing?

Is conversation becoming a lost art?

I see young people who seem to be out doing something together, having a meal, or going to the movies, but there they stand, not looking at each other but rather engrossed in texting to someone else. Or at least I hope they are texting to someone else… if they are texting to the other young people with them, then this problem has gotten worse than even I suspected. And how is it not an insult to those around you that you seem to find the typed words of other people more interesting than their company? I guess maybe it is because they obviously feel the same way about you.

I am sure I have said this before somewhere in this blog, but I would rather have someone type one line to me… it doesn’t have to have proper punctuation or good spelling… I don’t even care about content particularly… just say: ‘how are you, I are fine’. That was a communication. That was a personal interaction. That sentence will mean more to me than 5,000,000 pictures of cute kittens or funny jokes or clever sayings that you ran across on your no doubt horribly interesting explorations of the world-wide web…

I don’t know where I am going with all this. I just have this vague fear that movie, Wall-E, the one about the little robot who is the last sentient thing left on Earth, will turn out to be true… that we will all end up as huge, obese lumps on floating anti-grav couches, tended by robots and machines, with our sole interaction with other people and even the world around us being made through the intermediary of monitor screens.

Monitor screens are not a magic window into a deeper reality. Monitor screens are a pale impersonation of real life. Yes, they have their place. You can find interesting things in there… like my blog, for example… but a painting of a meadow is not the same as a meadow. We can’t ever let ourselves be fooled into thinking that virtual reality is better than real reality… or why would we ever want to come back from the virtual kind at all?

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88 Responses to Putting clever things done by other people on your FaceBook page and thinking you just communicated with someone is like vomiting up your last meal on someone’s plate and thinking that you just served them a meal…

  1. benzeknees's avatar benzeknees says:

    So I guess you won’t be following Tickle Me Tuesdays anymore when I start back up?

  2. I kind of hate it when I agree with you.

  3. “obese lumps on floating anti-grav couches” – YIKES! I don’t want to be an obese lump! A pleasantly plump lump, maybe. 🙂 You make excellent points here, sir. A good reminder to all.

  4. List of X's avatar List of X says:

    Art, but what if those young people staring at the phones are actually reading your blog?

  5. Trent Lewin's avatar Trent Lewin says:

    I love Wall-E, but you know, we are already obese lumps of flesh, we just don’t have colour-changing unitards and hover chairs yet.

  6. Oh, PMAO… I couldn’t disagree more. Those things on FB were meant to be shared. I want you to think about two things right now:
    1) There’s really not that much difference between reposting pics on Facebook, and reblogging posts on WordPress.
    2) I know someone who once did 9 or 10 posts of manipulated Dick Cheney pictures in a row. I know someone else who once did a post full of nothing but silly pictures of rainbow-related items/objects/creatures.

    Those little quizzes and memes and silly photos are simply icebreakers. You might not want to talk to someone about politics or religion, but their favorite 1980s song? What kind of vegetable they are? Sure! And then a conversation breaks out. It’s social media. Social. There are many ways to reach out.

  7. I love your metaphor of “the-smoothing-of-the-paths-of-communication-turning-into-ruts-and-thence-into-a-maze-or-warren-from-which-we-are-hard-pressed-to-escape.” Brilliant. There’s a poem in there somewhere. I just may be the guy to write it.

    I have a really bad habit (in terms of social etiquette) of answering those banal, rote interrogatives-of-greeting a bit too honestly. Or too creatively. Like:
    Them: “Hey, man. What’s up?”
    Me: “My sense of self loathing.”
    or
    Them: “How are you?”
    “Lousy. How are you?”

    I have been on Facebook for about five months and I believe that I am about done with it. I have SO many better things to do with my time. We all do.

    Peace.

    (real peace. not virtual peace.)

  8. Dan's avatar Dan says:

    Just recently, I addressed this issue somewhere in the blogosphere but don’t remember where. If here, well, it bears repeating. About 50 years ago the advertising industry began using the word “virtually” in a way that redefined it. I read about it a book at the time. It was called a “weasel word” which allowed that the meaning was being weaseled around as in, ” Use X and your dishes will be virtually spotless.” The inference being they WILL BE spotless. If you thought they would “almost be spotless” why would you buy the product. So now a “virtual” friendship within a virtual reality is as good as, if not better than, the real deal. To bitterly parse that a bit and further discredit that concept, here is the true definition of “virtual” from 6 “virtual” sources:

    almost or nearly as described, but not completely or according to strict definition.
    being such in power, force, or effect, though not actually or expressly such
    Almost or nearly as described, but not completely or according to strict definition:
    almost the same as the thing that is mentioned

    And now two of my personal favorites to put the finer point on this:

    Existing in the mind, especially as A PRODUCT OF THE IMAGINATION.

    very close to being something WITHOUT ACTUALLY BEING IT

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