Posts Tagged ‘blogging’

Life of Distractions

Posted by Andrew_Cox

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

Over the weekend I was at a rooftop bar people-watching with a group of friends when a guy at the bar caught my attention.  I only listened for a few minutes while I waited for my drink but his central thesis revolved around the idea that professional sports serve as an opiate for the masses and keep people distracted from “living their lives.”  I wish I had asked what he judged as a valuable use of time. He used sports as his example but it got me thinking that you could substitute any type of activity into his argument and say you were living life through distractions.  But if you can argue that being a super fan of a sports team or voting daily for the next American Idol is a waste of time, then what activities aren’t a waste of time?  Who judges what we deem a valid use of our time?  I thought about giving examples of all the different activities that must serve as distractions but I think I can sum it up by saying anything that anyone feels passionately about or spends a majority of their time doing could count by this guy’s definition.
I only asked the bar philosopher one question.  “Wouldn’t you consider work to be another distraction or opiate since people spend the majority of their days at work?”  He resoundingly concurred.  He said most people hate their job and remain in a state of discontentment because, well, doesn’t everybody?  Most people will conform to societal pressures and never venture past their comfort level, he said, because if everyone acted on their impulses all the time the larger society would crumble.  No one would perform the necessary but undesirable work needed to support our modern society.  I understood the point he wanted to convey, but I should have asked him the difference, in his mind, between living a fulfilling life and losing yourself in the “distractions” along the way.  I suspect he wanted to score debate points with his ideas, which have merit, and lead to interesting questions but I think our choices highlight our individuality.
Ultimately, I don’t think anyone can judge our use of time but ourselves.  If you want to spend your time ensuring your lawn looks immaculate, so be it.  If it provides you satisfaction and happiness then why stop?  If hockey consumes your life, you live and breathe the sport, then good for you.  Obviously people will argue with me by questioning how I can say people should just do what makes them happy.  How hedonistic!  What if killing others makes you happy?  I’m not arguing that people should succumb to each and every whim that enters their mind, but I am saying that we should spend less time worrying about how others spend their time or judging their values, and more time focusing on improving ourselves.  Focus on building relationships with the people that matter in your life and not worrying about what others think.  Who cares what the person at the grocery store thinks or the person on the other end of the phone.  It’s not like they are going to come through the phone and hurt you.  Aren’t we all just searching for something that makes us happy?  To balance the requirements of life such as work and family obligations with the selfish pursuits that excite us and provide fulfilment.  No one will remember how many miles you ran a day or what type of car you drove when you die; they will remember what kind of person you were.  Did you help your friends when they needed you?  Were you honest and tolerant of others or were you the first to get upset, the first to try and hurt others for your own gain?  Were you a person other people liked and wanted to spend time with or were you known as a jerk no one could stand?  So focus on actually living your life instead of worrying about what others think or if you’re spending your time wisely because living a life of worry isn’t really living at all.

The Times They Are A-Changin’

Posted by Andrew_Cox

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Think about what isn’t on the internet right now, any type of service. We are heading for a time when, even if something doesn’t seem like it will have a web presence, it will. Eventually, newspapers and magazines will terminate their paper versions and redirect their efforts to bolstering their online presence. It will be cheaper for these companies, and they will be more nimble and interactive. Instead of simply reading an article on any given topic, a reader will be able to see pictures, videos, and read about other people’s experiences along with the main article. It just makes too much sense in terms of reducing costs on materials, production, and transportation. With better technologies emerging everyday such as the Kindle for electronic reading, there will no doubt come a time when even books cease to be made through standard methods.

There will always be purists who claim that we are destroying tradition or precedent. But I look at it more as a form of evolution. More and more people will reach this conclusion once it’s no longer economically, environmentally, or even socially feasible to remain in the past, keeping our eyes closed to progress. Some people have already started to raise complaints about the information overload in our culture, recently citing the rising popularity of services such as Twitter or the destruction of our language and punctuation through texting. Some question the vanity of users on Twitter who feel the need to constantly express how they feel or what they are doing. But the user chooses the amount of connectivity they receive, plus constantly changing your status is only one of many ways a service like Twitter can be used.

Different niches, ideas, slants, organizations, political groups and anything else can maintain a centralized base to express and teach about their cultures and ideas online. No one has to remain at a certain site or even hear a viewpoint they don’t share when it’s one mouse click to leave a site (which is a problem in its own right). With the explosion of new information generated everyday and the almost exponential growth of the internet, the future of information services won’t lie in creating even more information, but in the categorization and classification of the highest quality and most relevant information so people won’t waste their time on erroneous searches. Depending upon how one judges the use of their time, the faster services and products become, the better it is for the individual. If I can save ten minutes from performing one task, then I have added an additional ten minutes to my life which I can choose to spend on something else. The internet has helped immensely in creating that sense of speed which has become engrained in the younger generations. I agree that part of our instantaneous culture is creating problems such as attentiveness in teaching children but we will circumvent these obstacles with new ideas and new growth. Perhaps that is the greatest contribution of the internet thus far: it has allowed for the creation and execution of almost any type of activity or business easily and cheaply. Was anyone talking about podcasting, blogging, or vlogging ten years ago? What will we be talking about ten years from now?

In the current social and business climate, we are experiencing a reset of not only job positions but our understanding of how business is conducted. To remain competitive, companies must look use all the tools available at their disposal and for cost reductions and increased functionality and connectivity, the web represents the future. Why pay millions for a radio or television add when you can specifically target your audience for free where they already congregate online? Rather than attack their competitors for trying to act trendy, companies should try harder to understand long term trends and embrace them rather than ignore what they don’t understand.