A couple of years ago I closed off a former blog. I had written so much pain and rage and frustration into that one and I couldn't see a way of rehabilitating it. But I couldn't just delete it, either. It's still there; I am the only person who can read it. Sometimes that will happen to a blog I used to casually read; I'll go there and the writer has shut that valve, sometimes forever.
Blogs are funny things; they are journals for most of us who write them, ways of communicating with the self. As I type, I don't usually plan out what I'm going to say, and often I just have an undefined something that I need to think about. But they are public, and there is an illusion of privacy being breached. I suppose that illusion can be pretty convincing sometimes.
I don't actually have any IRL* who write blogs the way I do. I know some online folks who write, but most people guard their secrets their privacy pretty carefully. Which I respect, but it's amazing to me those folks who write all those details, their lives, their disappointments and personal issues. I respect both types of folks-- those who write it all out, sharing the warts & all, and those who keep their privacy as close as they can.
I love that my friends and family can keep up with at least a little bit of what I'm thinking through this medium; I wish that I could, in turn, keep up with some of them, as well, in a similar fashion. Since I don't know very many people who blog, for realz, the blogs I do read are folks who I "met online". I love to read a story about their day, see a cool photo, step a minute out of my own head.
Lately, talking on the phone seems so invasive, so hard to do right. I can't unsay something on the phone, highlight a phrase that didn't come out right and retype it better, so it's less painful, nicer. So I don't give away too much. So that I do it right. I find myself, with some people in phone conversations, not doing it right. Screwing it up. Wishing I could start over.
But I am also well aware that reading a blog entry does not mean I know anything about this person in more ways than superficially. I know what they are writing, what they are telling me, but I don't know everything. It's a kind of connection, and sometimes I have felt I know someone better through the blog world than I do some people in that "real life" that I speak to every day. Just as when I write a blog, I don't say things that I don't feel like sharing. What I share is honestly far more superficial than people realize, I guess. It seems like there is nothing I won't write. I've written about physical pain, emotional pain, love, life, hate, rage, disappointment.
Sometimes, when I blog, I can do that and more.
But what I have here today is a winter blue sky, windy, isolated clouds that imagination cannot shape into anything other than cold cloud, and trees that are mostly bare and shadows playing on my neighbor's roof.
2 comments:
Awesome, Kim. I have so often felt the same way. "I can't unsay something on the phone, highlight a phrase that didn't come out right and retype it better...Wishing I could start over." I mess up my spoken words so often and don't say what I mean. It's why I love the written word. I can proofread and think about it and decide if that's actually how I feel. If not, I delete. If so, I publish.
I always wish Jed and I could have our arguments in written word. He's such a good arguer (why he was an awesome lawyer), and I'm just an emotional mess when someone doesn't agree with me. I hate that about myself, but have never been able to change it. Later though, when I write about it, I can always come up with the right and good things to "say."
I feel the same way "journals for most of us who write them, ways of communicating with the self. As I type, I don't usually plan out what I'm going to say, and often I just have an undefined something that I need to think about." I'm trying to get back into my blog, because it was always a good way for me to hash out whatever issues (good or bad) I was dealing with. I need that release even more now... It's hard, though, because by the time I have the time to sit down and type up something I'm tired, it's late, or I've just lost the train of thought.
And, boy oh boy, have I gotten a lot of flack from my mom for blogging un-anonymously! :)
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