Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Connections Are Not Bonds: Communication in New Media

Cook's Choice: POST 6

Mom with Dad and Grand Kids
My mom died recently and one of the tasks that we were beset with was letting everyone know and to get the information out for the visitation, funeral and interment. It was through this process that I realized, again but in a different way, how much our modes of communication have changed and how splintered communication has become to me.

Contacting our longtime family friends was easy. My dad has meticulously kept the same Rolodex all our lives. We simply divided the letters and started calling everybody. We also placed an obituary in both Twin Cities papers. Covered!

For my own friends, I sent out a mass text, email and I posted the obituary to Facebook. It did not even occur to me to call anybody. It is a reflection more of my friends than of myself, because so many of my friends are on Facebook now and never even listen to voice mail, much less pick up their phones.

It was surprising who showed up and who didn't. One of my best friends, who has become a Facebook junkie during the course of our friendship, didn't show up even though she responded to the initial text without the obit info. Two weeks later texted me to ask me when the funeral was. When I told her she missed it she said she was "in and out" of Facebook and that I had the wrong email address. To bad she didn't send out an update on her contact info. On the other hand, my oldest friend showed up because of the post on Facebook. We hadn't seen each other in decades and it was really good to reconnect.We have a date for dinner next week.

In the old days, before cell phones, I knew the habits of my friends. I knew when it was too early or late to call; I knew when they ate dinner and when their kids went to bed. There were life patterns that you were in tune with because you had a certain amount of intimacy with your friends and the most common way to communicate was by phone. This is not the norm any more and I think it has a lot to do with how our modes of communication have changed.

In the Atlantic article, "Is Facebook Making Us Lonely?" there are a ton of studies cited and points made about loneliness, narcissism and the difference between connections and bonds. The main point I took away from this fascinating article is that bonds are much deeper then an online connection. Research bears out that face to face contact is still the strongest method to build true bonds between people. In Facebook, you get out of it what you put into it, and the more "complex" a communication is, especially if it causes you to connect in person, the more high quality the interaction it is.

Especially after this class, I realize I need to use new media more intentionally than I have been, both for making a better world and for making my personal bonds stronger. But I won't forget to invite someone to have a cup of coffee or have new people and old friends over for dinner on a regular basis. These actions build the bonds that truly are the ties that bind and keep a strong social net.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Facebook Obsession

Facebook has become a household name around the world. People log on every day to post about their activities, likes, dislikes, and converse with friends. The social media site has a lot to offer users. It allows them to store pictures, create life time lines, listen to their favorite music, share videos, etc.

But who is really gaining here; Facebook users, or Facebook itself?

Every day users enter endless data about themselves into this social media site. It is scary to look at the future plans of Facebook and what they might be doing with this information. This video goes into more detail about the progression of the worlds most popular way to connect.