Conversation

Not many responses. But most strategies I see are at one end of a barbell: either dive into fray to fight battles that will be forgotten, or retreat to write less, less publicly, more specialized, and in response to less contemporary stimuli. More past, future or alt realities.
Quote Tweet
Those of you who, like me, write in public a lot: What if, anything, have you done to adapt your style to the more beefy, toxic zeitgeist and discourse of the last few years? What’s your signal-in-noise strategy? Radiation hardening strategy?
1
16
I think this means we’ll experience a sense of amnesia looking back to this period from the future. Since writers are underinvesting in enduring responses to the here-and-now. Normally that quadrant if 2x2 contains most of the mass.
2
7
Replying to
yeah. I have a chronic "fear"(?) of future amnesia, which leads to me doing all sorts of memory/history curation bits. I feel like it's important to me to be able to quickly and easily pick any year of my life and get a quick sense of the highlights (personal, local, global)
1
3
Replying to
I don’t think you can fight it, at least not alone. Logging and journaling don’t anchor long-term memory, you need creative live responses for that. Creative agency is memory and too many writers have experienced too deep a loss of agency.
1
3