Writing Drunk or Sober
Some thoughts on writers and internet addiction:
Consider this my explanation for why my blogging has been light of late.
I am coming to suspect that the internet will be to my generation of journalists, and to any younger ones, what alcohol was to our predecessors': a destroyer first of thought and then of productivity, destructive both of the capacity to reflect, and to react, blurring everything into a haze of talk and endlessly repeated variations on the same experience. Just like alcohol, and even cigarettes once were, it seems an inevitable part of the job, one of the things that distinguishes it from all others. Stories are chased and found on the net just as they once were in bars.
This won't kill journalism, or thought, of course. There were always many journalists who functioned drunk, and some who could not function any other way.
...But the internet has no edges, any more than it has depth. The sudden movement of someone else's thought across a screen is something you can follow far beyond the room in which your thoughts could be confined. There's no tether to jerk you back and by the time your thoughts return, the room has changed: whatever lay in front of the next sentence has disappeared. And so I sit now in a room with a window and no telephone, waiting for the next sentence, patient and pious as a dried-out drunk.
Consider this my explanation for why my blogging has been light of late.
Comments
Bravo on equating alcohol and the internet. Who knew?
For aspiring writers, the Internet is a source of valuable information, in which we can drown if we're not careful. It's all about balance. We (I) need to balance the time we spend on the Internet with the time we spend living and writing. Internet time should always, always be the least amount of time.
Great post.
Scott
Thanks for sharing!
It falls under self-control and responsibility for one's own actions. If we can't control our urge to spend a gazillion hours online, then we have no one but ourselves to blame.
Great post! I do get addicted, I must admit. :)
It also "scratches the writing itch." (Josephing Damien has a series of posts on this topic on her blog. It's practically a campaign, and she's really correct about it.)
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glovin
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