I ran into someone a few days ago who prefers the name-calling style of communication. As these things frequently unfold, the name-calling escalated when it could have just as easily have been derailed by a simple apology...or even just by leaving the conversation...rather than an obstinate and seemingly never-ending defense of the behavior.
Eventually, the person wrote the following, which is the inspiration for this essay.
I don't [think] you should be getting so bent out of shape because of words typed up by some random people you don't know. I think you should take a step back and get some perspective if you really have such a hard time dealing with the ramblings of anonymous goobers on the internet.
I do not consider the people I meet on the Internet to be "random people I don't know." I call them my friends. That's probably why behavior on the Internet means more to me than him.
Originally posted at Docudharma.
I am a member of an extremely small minority. Most
meat-world communities with fewer than 40,000 people would be hard pressed to produce one or two of us, especially if we were required to be openly trans and still alive. So when I came out, I went the one place where I knew I could find a community of people like me: online.
I've spent the seventeen years since then participating in, building, and in some cases moderating similar communities of people like the ones I found back in 1992.
Communities of people. Not "random goobers." The words you read on your computer screen when you go to this blog or any other are not random ramblings. They were written by people.
I've watched people...my friends...live and grow, get married or partnered, have children and grandchildren, and sometimes get sick and die. Sometimes they have committed suicide. Sometimes they lost their jobs or their homes. More often they reached out their hands to help others when it was needed, probably because those are the sort of people I am drawn towards.
I have traveled the country and visited many of the people I encountered first on the Internet and felt instant recognition when we finally met face-to-face. I've driven from Arkansas to Virginia for Thanksgiving dinner with women from an email list and from Little Rock to Dallas to have a few glasses of wine. I stayed with friends in Seattle when I tried to move there and was looking for a job.
I met someone who lived in Japan and we began a long distance relationship. Our face-to-face meeting was in Hawaii over the Xmas break of 1993-94. Although the relationship did not survive my surgery, I did recover at her house in Indiana. And I grew a lot as a woman from knowing her.
I didn't...and will not...say that everyone I've met on the 'net was or has been my friend. There are my friends and people who have not become my friends yet. That's the stance I adopted when I joined the Internet in 1992 and it is the point of view I have tried to maintain since then.
I know some people don't get it. They think online communications and friendships are not as real as what one finds in meat space.
That's last century type thinking, it seems to me. Our world has grown. It is no longer limited to what we can touch.
Sometimes there have been friendships that were made and then dissolved through misunderstandings by one of us. That happens all too easily in this medium, unfortunately. One of the downsides.
But the interactions are no less real because of it.
You can choose to learn who the people behind the words on the page are if you want to do so. All it takes is the effort to reach out.
I wrote this poem in 1993. I think it still applies.
Art Link
Bits and Bytes
E-spacing
There is no sound but the clickety-clack of fingers on the keyboard
There are no sights but the electronically formed letters on the screen
But there are people in my computer
Riding the crest of the technological future
And I have joined them
We have stripped ourselves down to the thoughts we express
Mind meeting mind with no distractions
The carefully chosen phrase can be undone
By the carelessly tossed word
A misplaced comma may cost a friendship
We become our vocabulary and our usage of it
Our emotions are expressed only through punctuation
Yet we bare our souls to each other
And form relationships deeper than those in the real world
Because we must always trust each other
Finland, Australia, South Africa and Canada
Maine, Virginia, New Hampshire and Kansas
Baltimore, Cleveland, San Francisco and Boston
I have trod on your virtual streets today
And visited with some of your most caring inhabitants
We embrace each other thought to thought
And love each other's wisdom
We share our joys and pain
And support each other through our sorrows and triumphs
This is life in e-space
--Robyn Elaine Serven
--June, 1993 |
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