Life without Facebook, well this is almost the first week
over and the feeling is actually not one of lose but of huge relief. The sheer freedom not to have that constant
checking of postings is like giving up an onerous job.
Have made little progress otherwise. Watched films instead of watching
Facebook/internet, so not a great break through and then yesterday I began
reading a book. It is an old favourite,
“To Kill a Mockingbird” and am struck by the delight of being able to put the
book down and have a break and come back to it. Novels don’t have that gripping attention that the film/internet
demands. It is like an old friend that
you can meet, not see for a few days and then carry on as if nothing has been
disturbed. I am walking more, talking
to family instead of being plugged in.
It is early days yet but so far being without Facebook has been a really
positive experience.
I am delighted
that close friends are sending more personal emails to me, making the real
effort to keep in touch. Facebook
allows that sense of being connected to those we know but it is a fairly
insincere contact. You get all the
information without actually talking or phoning. No real effort is required other than a constant updating on what
everyone is doing. That effort is not
balanced by what is received.
Monitoring the postings of friends is not participating in their lives
it is more voyeuristic than I like. It
is early days but so far life without Facebook feels like a step forward for
me. Strange to read that others have
also made that choice and come to similar conclusions. Here is one such account that struck a chord
with me.
“I quit Facebook because I wanted to live deliberately.
Seventeen
months ago, I deleted my Facebook account — not just deactivated it, but fully
deleted it — and the relief was tremendous.
No
longer did I have to check for updates, deal with friend requests (is this
someone whose updates I want in my life? do I want them to see mine?), post
whatever was happening in my life, be grossed out by inappropriate sharing,
listen to those who wanted to promote their latest business or interests, care
about what Farmville game someone else was playing, look at what other people
are having for lunch or what parties they’re going to, see “funny” photos,
worry about whether people “liked” my update or photo … and so on and so on.
This
is not to belittle what others do, but to reflect on the noise that builds up
when we participate neck-deep in a social network.”
From http://zenhabits.net/fb/