hermionesviolin: image of The Thinker with text "Liberal Arts Major: will ponder for food" (will ponder for food)
2008-02-24 10:58 pm

LJ entry #4,000

Which I would have reached much sooner if I'd been more on top of writeups of tv etc.

***

In wandering LJ not too long ago, I saw [livejournal.com profile] resolute posted an excerpt from an essay on the idea of Ambient Intimacy:
Ambient intimacy is about being able to keep in touch with people with a level of regularity and intimacy that you wouldn't usually have access to, because time and space conspire to make it impossible. ... There are a lot of us, though, who find great value in this ongoing noise. It helps us get to know people who would otherwise be just acquaintances. It makes us feel closer to people we care for but in whose lives we're not able to participate as closely as we'd like.

Knowing these details creates intimacy. (It also saves a lot of time when you finally do get to catchup with these people in real life!) It's not so much about meaning, it's just about being in touch.
The essay is about Twitter, but the idea of "ambient intimacy" makes sense for a lot of online interactions. I don't really "use" facebook much, and a lot about it annoys me, but it does have the value of keeping me fairly passively and tangentially abreast of what's going on with various acquaintances. And of course, LiveJournal. I kind of laughed at the "It also saves a lot of time when you finally do get to catchup with these people in real life!" because I post so much of my life on my LJ that when I do have meatspace interactions with flisters I'm often like, "So, um, I don't really know what to say that you don't already know" (though not everyone has time to read their flists regularly, which I understand, but which still annoys me because I assume that if I've posted it to LJ then you've read it).

Thinking about ambient intimacy, I though about how even skimming your flist you can keep abreast of what's going on with people, which made me feel less guilty about the fact that I post so much -- like, if the point isn't for people to read and respond to every single detail but rather to feel more generally connected, then it's okay to post stuff that not everyone's going to read.

Though it's still something of a weird balance, because I'm aware of an audience, but I'm also writing for my own record-keeping, but because of my knowledge of the audience (as well as the public nature of my LJ) there's stuff I don't say or stuff I say certain ways -- and yes, some of it is cryptic personal relationship stuff or whatever, but some of it is just balancing how many mundane anecdotes I want to inflict on the flist.

Another excerpt from the essay:
It helps us get to know people who would otherwise be just acquaintances. It makes us feel closer to people we care for but in whose lives we’re not able to participate as closely as we’d like.
It's interesting to think about how LiveJournal has shaped what the community of people I'm in regular contact with is. I often feel like, "If you're not on LiveJournal, I'm not likely to keep up with what's going on in your life." And the reverse is fairly true, because I'm bad at doing update e-mails/conversations but with the "noise" of LJ posting, people can maintain a sense of what's going on in my life.

I got my LJ near the beginning of the time I was in college, and I did it largely as an easy way to keep lots of people updated on my life without having to send multiple e-mails all saying basically the same thing. The audience for my LJ, however, ended up being: my parents, lots of people I went to college with, and a growing number of online-only friends. Two and a half years out of college, now, I've gotten really used to my LJ not intersecting (in terms of readership) with my other meatspace lives. While intellectually I know that anyone from work theoretically could come across my LJ, I basically assume that they won't. And I have yet to decide whether to share my LJ with any church folks (a new CWM friend has an LJ). There are parts of my life that I write about as if no one connected to it is reading, and it's weird to think of them reading it.

And I have no nice conclusion to this collection of thoughts.
hermionesviolin: (self)
2008-02-05 11:19 pm
Entry tags:

The internet's a tiny place.

Which has been brought to my attention in various ways recently (none terribly problematic -- yet).  Given how much I fail at being vague, I really should lock down the stuff about work.  I hate the politics of "friending" (be it on LiveJournal or on facebook or whatever), so I like having all my entries public (except for private-locked stuff, but that's different), but I'm already cryptic about some stuff for certain reasons (which will probably continue, rather than making special posting filters, but who knows) so it's not like I'm totally unconscious of audience (as if I ever was).  So yeah, I'll probably start back-locking stuff soon (and probably locking things going forward).  Just fyi.

Edit: Dad, this means I'll have to make you an LJ account after all.
hermionesviolin: image of Jewel Staite (who played Kaylee on Firefly) with text "Jewel" (jewel)
2007-08-01 10:51 pm

Today I kept sort of forgetting that I'm leaving *tomorrow.*

I went to 12:10 Eucharist at SSJE with [livejournal.com profile] sk8eeyore (Sarah) and [livejournal.com profile] marketsquare (Chris) today.  (Who knew there was a monastery/chapel on Mem. Drive next to JFK Park?  Not me.)  Read more... )

I invited them back to Spangler for lunch and felt bad that I then abandoned them to go back to my desk (having already essentially taken my lunch hour).

Chris: "How do you two know each other?"
Sarah: "From LiveJournal, I guess."
Chris: "Oh, the old-fashioned way."
     Heart like whoa!  So much better than last time when we (and Ari) tried to explain LiveJournal to Jan :)

***

I learned that Labor Day weekend (well, Friday-Sunday) is:
Liberating Love, Celebrating Hope!
The National More Light Presbyterians Conference

Atlanta, GA. - August 31-September 2, 2007

I'm tempted (would be moreso if they actually had a schedule up).  I would feel really weird taking Friday off the week I get back, though.  Maybe next year?  (Not that I don't have enough travel plans for next year already.  If Convo turns out to be awesome, it had better not conflict with WriterCon next year.)

***

[livejournal.com profile] maechi links to this article on Joss' Comic-Con appearance (did I miss him having a 2nd kid?).  Contains the same Buffy comic casting spoiler as in the "Ripper" link from my previous post.

Excerpt which many of you will appreciate:
Whedon then took a moment to tell the audience about a pet project he's been working on for some time: "I'm composing the score for a short film, a ballet starring Summer Glau." The film is called "The Serving Girl," and Whedon is reportedly in talks with a "great choreographer."
***

They now have tags on the machines in the gym explaining that you can plug your headphones into the thingies they attached to the machines and switch between the half a dozen channels (each tv is on a different channel, so switching it on your machine switches which one your headphones tune to).

I didn't push quite as hard on the elliptical today as I did last time, but still respectable:
1mi @ 11:23min
2 mi @ 23:05min
2.58?mi @ 30min


***

I've been drafting a post about the daily_deviant thing, so hopefully I can get that finished when I get back from Convo -- kicking off IBARW.

***

[livejournal.com profile] soundingsea has the most comprehensive coverage I've seen of the Twin Cities bridge collapse.

"The Interstate Hwy. 35W bridge over the Mississippi River collapsed during the evening rush hour Wednesday, dumping an estimated 50 vehicles into the water and onto the land below"
hermionesviolin: black and white photo of Emma Watson as Hermione, with text "hermionesviolin" (hermione by oatmilk)
2006-12-02 06:34 pm

Tomorrow is the first Sunday of Advent.

We got to the fair right around start time (9am).  I had distressed Carol by undoing her alphabetization, so I helped redo it.  Was uneventful.  I took first lunch (11:30) with my mom and grandma.  We sat with the son (John) of one of the church ladies (whose name I don't know), who was fun.  Before lunch, Bev had sat down behind our table and I was rubbing her back, and a friend of Carol's (Joanna) was shopping, and she said, "If I go behind the table, do I get a backrub?"  We chatted about massage therapy and I saw her when we were waiting to get lunch and gave her a brief backrub.  "Much better than lunch," she said.  When we got back from lunch, my mom said that I could probably leave since it was fairly quiet.  I started saying goodbye to people, but John P. showed up and chatted with me for a while.  He's been working at McArthur all week and will be back on Monday, so mayhap he'll actually stop by and see me.  (We've been talking about this for I don't know how long since he's often working at the b-school.)  I also talked with Elsa for a while.  It was about 2pm when I left.  I went to say goodbye to John P., Mike F., and whassisname, and John hugged me (for like the umpteenth time that afternoon) and said something like, "This is one of the great things about this church; lots of hugs."

***

So, from a couple recent posts, I guess there has been sockpuppet wank?  I talk way too much about everything to be a sockpuppet.  However, this did prompt me to check my mutual friends list to see how many could honestly vouch for my meatspace existence, for curiosity's sake.  I'd say it's a solid majority.  Lots of them I know from college, some from high school, some I met at WriterCon '06, some I met at a [livejournal.com profile] valley_slash meetup or at Oxford (though I'm not really in touch with either of those two sets), and others I've visited at school/home or vice versa.  Plus of course my immediate family.  [Of 93 mutual LJ friends, 31 -- exactly one third -- I haven't met in meatspace.]

via [livejournal.com profile] marginalia: This says I'm a D-list blogger.  Whatever.

via [livejournal.com profile] fox1013: NPH and Jason Segel sing "Confrontation" (Javert and Valjean) from Les Mis [during The Megan Mullally Show where the whole HIMYM cast was a guest]Made of awesome.  Note from repeated viewing: look at their nametags

***

My Secret Slasha assignment isn't what I had hoped for, but it's a challenge I don't mind.  Bit of a shame Secret Slasha doesn't do the Dear Writer letters.

***

It took me far too long to finish my letter to Joe F. in response to the columns I so disagreed with, but I had a nice reply from him in my mailbox today.  [I really like writing for being able to craft what I'm saying, but I miss the conveyance of tone that is in a lot of ways so much easier in meatspace.]  "None of your criticisms were things I haven't heard before, however, so be assured that you have plenty of company in disliking the columns; indeed, many in that category are personal friends of mine."  He quoted one of his early editors, something I had heard from him before but had forgotten: "If everybody likes you, you're not doing your job."  He also managed to pleasantly surprise me, though he also posited that "gay marriage is very much a matter of basic civics," which I agree with but take in a very different direction than he does.  Definitely drafting a response tonight.  He closed with, "Anyway, it was nice to hear from you.  I'm happy you care enough to read the papers and respond.  I wish more people did, especially young bright ones like you."  I miss discussion, argumentative or no :)
hermionesviolin: an image of Alyson Hannigan (who plays Willow Rosenberg) with animated text "you think you know / what you are / what's to come / you haven't even / BEGUN" (you think you know...)
2004-07-07 04:19 pm

Huh, this is interesting.

[Checking out the "more info" link, i see that "rarer interest" means one shared by fewer than 20 users.]

[Oh and [livejournal.com profile] hedy, look: [livejournal.com profile] blog_sociology]



Please be patient. This may take a few minutes.
Interest suggestions for hermionesviolin
Step 1: extracting your interests.COMPLETED.
Step 2: extracting users who share your rarer interests. COMPLETED.
Step 3: extracting *their* interests . COMPLETED
Step 4: Counting and sorting interests . COMPLETED

RESULTS
Based on the lj interests lists of those who share my more unusual interests, the interests suggestion meme thinks I might be interested in a few things i most definitely am not )
hermionesviolin: an image of Alyson Hannigan (who plays Willow Rosenberg) with animated text "you think you know / what you are / what's to come / you haven't even / BEGUN" (you think you know...)
2004-02-14 12:23 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

LJ is such a weird forum. It’s so easy to “make friends” with people, but it’s also often so difficult to know where you stand with someone. I mean, i can be really good friends with someone and read all their entries, but if i never comment (and don’t often see them in person) it can look the same as if “friended” them and then filtered them out of my f’list view.

The insanity that is all of our lives does not aid in alleviating this angst. There are so many people i actually could make hang-out dates with if we had any free time, for example. And i don’t filter out any of the people i have on my f’list (though i often filter communities) but i’ve been bad about commenting.

It is tempting to do a poll to see how many of you actually read this, because clearly i have complexes.

I myself subscribe mostly to the carrier bag theory of blogging, which is that a blog is a shapeless baggy container that will hold just about anything you care to put in it. I've used this blog to discuss books, TV shows, writing, fandom, fanfiction, dental appointments, financial worries, and current affairs, not to mention my various neuroses. At this point, I figure that no one reads all the entries, and that anyone reading it regularly has gotten used to skimming the gold from the dross, for their personal values of "gold" and "dross." A lot of blogs are navel-gazing, or are devoted to what I consider the tedious details of strangers' or semistrangers' lives; I don't read them. But I assume that they serve some purpose for the blogger, or the blogger's friends.

We all use the telephone. We don't all make the same kind of calls.

...

I think of my blog as being sort of like my backpack. (Today it's even black, like every single backpack I've ever owned.) It gets beat up, I put anything in it that it can hold, the zipper usually gets broken, and it's useful for pretty much whatever I want to do. Or I'll try to make it useful by sheer force of will, which, come to think of it, is usually how the zipper gets broken.

-melymbrosia
Oh, and that interview meme seems to have come back. I suck at coming up with questions to ask people, but ask me anything and i’ll answer.