Surfing Away From Here

These two gents say it better than I.

I’m spending less time online and more time in-person. I abandoned Twitter. Deleted the Reddit app from my phone. I even pruned my RSS feeds. I check deleted Facebook rarely entirely. Instead I’ve created a text list of friends to pay a visit to. I’m going to make it down the list to see everyone by the end of 2019. 

I got a Kindle from my wife for an early Christmas present. Renewed my library card. Notifications don’t exist on the Kindle and I’m still stupefied by e-ink. I can’t tab over to another app nor return to a home screen of jeweled distraction. I am spending more time reading long form books (boy is it hard to stay focused. I’m out of mental shape!). I’m playing more with the kids. Spending more time in the kitchen. 

And you know what? I don’t miss any of it. The stuff I was “reading” (wasting my time with) were frivolous drops of nothingness. Their mental caloric intake was negative. The fear of missing out has been replaced with the much healthier fear of getting sucked back in.

To quote yet another more eloquent persons, “This isn’t about not doing anything ever, it’s about not wasting your time filling your brain up with stuff that isn’t accomplishing anything except avoiding a feeling of discomfort.”

If you’re reading this, I care about you. I hope you’ll consider doing the same. See you on the outside.

P.S. Want to get lunch sometime?

John Roderick – XOXO Festival

A frequent guest at XOXO, John Roderick is the frontman and songwriter of The Long Winters, the receiving end of Merlin Mann’s weekly phone calls for Roderick on the Line, and one of our favorite storytellers of all time.

One of the most consistently funny talks from XOXO 2016 1 , John Roderick laid on the line the myth of no effort. 2 The idea that trying to be cool, to avoid being considered uncool, is unhealthy. Being cool is not more important than admitting to yourself and others that something required hard work. Because, as my dad likes to say, “If it wasn’t hard, they wouldn’t call it work”.

I wonder if some of this comes from the fallacy of youth. That as young people we’re not well-educated on how to take a compliment. Maybe it’s partial social anxiety at being “found out” (like imposter syndrome) so it’s easier to minimize and brush off the effort it truly took to do something. I was raised in the midwest, so part of how I was raised was to remain earnest and modest. Maybe that shortens the impact of our work and our growth as people?

In the second half of the talk Roderick got into why he kept finding himself doing things that came to him easily.

Speaking for myself (and many other people I know), some people keep doing the easy thing, or find another easy thing thinking it’s harder, but never get the courage to do the truly hard thing. Doing the truly hard thing is, unsurprisingly, hard.

So, my encouragement to you: Don’t be contented with being contented.

As Jackie put it while watching this with me, “There is always more to be done. Be ok with the ambiguity of that.”

Link List – February 23, 2018

I’m trying to use less social media, but as a voracious reader-and-sharer — the early 21st century equivalent to the hunter-and-gatherer — I now don’t have an easy outlet for sharing interesting things I discover. So, I’m going to start a regular thing here on my site where I collect some recent bookmarks and share them. No commentary, just the headline and a link.

America First | VICE News Tonight’s Special Report On Trump’s First Year In Office (HBO)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YtHZVhxQPH8

Black Panther’s Director Is Very Into Stardew Valley Right Now
https://kotaku.com/black-panthers-director-is-very-into-stardew-valley-rig-1823243607

Design’s Lost Generation
https://medium.com/@monteiro/designs-lost-generation-ac7289549017

Homeopathy Explained
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8HslUzw35mc

The Things You Should Always Carry With You in Japan
https://lifehacker.com/what-you-should-always-carry-in-japan-1822670049

The File (Dis)connect
http://magnusmanske.de/wordpress/?p=509

What Ever Happened To Brendan Fraser?
https://www.gq.com/story/what-ever-happened-to-brendan-fraser

The Case Against The Jedi
http://popculturedetective.agency/2018/the-case-against-the-jedi

Xbox chief calls for more inclusivity and an end to toxic gamers
https://www.polygon.com/2018/2/21/17037172/xbox-phil-spencer-toxic-gamers-dice-2018-keynote

I’m building my dad a computer. Here is what we put together
https://pcpartpicker.com/list/QPdRsZ

Here are two things about maps on the Internet
https://kottke.org/18/02/mapping-apps-and-how-advertising-subtly-warps-user-experience
https://blog.emacsen.net/blog/2018/02/16/osm-is-in-trouble/

VLC 3.0 is out!
https://www.videolan.org/vlc/releases/3.0.0.html

Ride Review – Kawasaki Z900RS
http://www.returnofthecaferacers.com/2018/02/ride-review-kawasaki-z900rs.html

Here are three games I’ve been playing recently
http://www.celestegame.com
https://xenobladechronicles2.nintendo.com
https://www.guerrilla-games.com/play/horizon

Let me know with a comment or email if you find any of it interesting. It’s like a newsletter about random stuff I like. Subscribe!

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“My set is my office, because that’s where I work.”

Professional interviewer of current presidents, Hank Green, talks about legitimacy in media.

Walter Cronkite wasn’t representing a political ideology, or even discussing politics when my father watched the news as a teenager. He was discussing the news. Cable news today uses the residual legitimacy of that bygone era (that they are simultaneously destroying) to degrade the legitimacy of their political opponents.

Man, the ‘news’ is really crap isn’t it? I think younger people 1 – with easy access to information covering multiple viewpoints – have a lower tolerance for bullshit and a higher propensity to detecting it.

Hank talks about authenticity and honesty in his essay, elements that traditional news is lacking. That lack of trust is something that news 2 once had, but is sorely missing. Younger people are often labeled as cynics when we balk at the junk ‘news’ they’re throwing out. We’re considered disinterested or disconnected when we tell folks we don’t watch the 9 o’clock news. When in reality, we can see through their dishonesty and are insulted.

Will that trust and authenticity come back to traditional media? I say no. I think folks like Hank are the future of news creation. That’s what their audience wants (and expects). Folks with access to more information want honesty and trust in who is telling them the news.

You can watch the interview with the President on YouTube. Hank even shares a few thoughts about the experience on the vlogbrothers channel.