In May 1993 – the exact date and time escape me – my inner
world, the one where thoughts are born, developed and processed, lost its
ability to be silent. I since have lived with constant noise, the result of a
tumor that, in an ironic nod to God’s comic grace, left me deaf in one ear yet
covered in a perpetual blanket of ringing static.
Sometimes it’s not too bad, other times it’s so loud it
sounds like there’s a KISS concert in my cranium. But it is always there,
never fully abated, never completely quiet. It will never be quiet, and it has
been so long I have forgotten what quiet is, what silence sounds like, what
kinds of thoughts stillness brings. How much smarter, how less painful the
headaches and seizures, how more aware of my environment would I be if only I
could hear more – and then, like most people, dial down the volume and hear
nothing but thinking.
Rather than go insane, I did the next best thing – I went
into marketing. Turns out my decision was less pathos than it was prescience,
as I watch my former trade of journalism in some cases melt away, in others
morph into a new kind of socially-driven journalism enabled (if not always ennobled)
by modern technology.
THE DESCENT OF PRINT alone is not a problem for our
society. But the descent of thought is. And this death of reasonable thinking
and discourse has given rise to a ringing in all our ears, a cacophony of
“social media” for its own sake rather than the sake of the consumer.
Don’t get me wrong (though I guarantee someone will) – I
love technology and Web 2.0. I believe in the power of conversation and the
promise of connecting people to each other with authentic communications. But
in this new silicon rush we far too often discount what’s gone before, throwing
judgment into the intellectual pyre like so many worn newspapers.
In other words, in our well-meant effort to broaden and
share our knowledge, are we also destroying the very knowledge and reasoned
discussion we so boldly claim to seek?
Because we can connect with people like ourselves, we
do. And then we act as if other opinions don't exist -- or if they do, then
don't matter. We do this within our social networks, the pseudo social media
intelligentsia do it at conferences and on their blogs, and the news media does
it by giving us news tuned to whatever ideological frequency we desire.
We jump to conclusions and applaud hyperbole until the
slightest chance of digesting an idea is gone. That idea is destroyed forever,
lost in the echo chamber of self-important consultants and rash Twitter feeds.
Never before in human history has so much information been
available so readily to so many. Yet although we are creating and writing more,
we are saying less.
IN FAHRENHEIT 451, RAY BRADBURY’S seminal novel about censorship and
intellectual intolerance, a “fireman” was someone who burned books. Well, we
don’t burn books per se, but we burn discourse. We don't destroy newspapers,
but our actions are killing them off just the same. We are the firemen.
So this is my warning and my plea: don’t get caught up in
the social media panacea. Instead, experiment and decide what works for you and
your company. Focus on the customer first and the technology second. It’s okay
to take small steps, to do what’s best for your business, to embrace new tools
at your own pace even if it goes against the “purists” who argue that there’s
only one way to move forward.
And above all, take time to think, to plan, to discuss and
learn. Embrace the unknown and reject those who insist they know it all. Find
some silence and make decisions without being surrounded by so much noise.
I would give anything for just a few seconds of mental peace
and quiet. Don’t squander yours.
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