Posts tagged as:

micromedia

The Sharing of Joys and Concerns

by Laura Fitton on July 31, 2008

Tonight I told a friend how Twitter can be lovely company when you’re alone and bored. That it’s a nice place for the sharing of simple joys and concerns.

Though I’m agnostic, I grew up in a strong, compassionate church community (Congregationalist) in Connecticut that I still feel connected to. A ritual part of church was the weekly sharing of joys and concerns. A simple book lay at the entry to the church. Anyone could add a line, and their words were read for all to hear.

This simple, ordinary sharing of joys and concerns is one of the tremendous human strengths of Twitter and microsharing in general. Both can inspire, especially when the concerns are outside ourselves — not self-indulgent, but concerns for others and for the changes that we can make in the world.

Some mistake “social media” for something “new.” But the most compelling truths I notice in this space are simple ones that echo furthest back in human experience. Humans gather. They share joys and concerns. They hope for one another and try to create better things.

Compelling platforms set conditions for people to replicate these in a natural, accessible way. We shouldn’t kid ourselves that it’s the software.

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Breaking Story #bwstory

May 8, 2008

Who’d have thought this blog would ever concern itself with “breaking news?” Certainly not me. But BusinessWeek Senior Writer Stephen Baker is currently using Twitter to write an article about Twitter.
Using the #hashtags convention, you can follow @stevebaker’s Tweets and the ensuing pan-Twitter conversation in any number of ways. You can also follow the discussion [...]

Read the full article →