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Greg Morris says, “It’s not the Internet it’s you

I started paying attention to the triggers that whisked me away down an internet rabbit hole, and by and large it wasn’t the internets fault — it was mine.

Yep.

This touched on something I’ve been thinking about too. It’s not just our relationship to these apps and services that is a problem that we have the power to solve. The people we’ve become because of them are our problem to solve too. The feelings they arise in us and the behaviors they promote, that’s on us. We can change that too.

Sure, it starts with the deleting of an app or cancelling a service but that’s only the first step. The next step is deep introspection and asking, “Is this who I want to be?” Because if we can solve that then, perhaps, we can return to these places with a different perspective and more control over the environment they foster.

Of course, that begs another question…

“Is this where I want to be?”

Radiohead – The Numbers: Jonny, Thom & a CR78

“The future is inside us. It’s not somewhere else… We call upon the people. Only people have this power. The numbers don’t decide. Your system is a lie. A river running dry. The wings of a butterfly. And you may pour us away like soup. Like we’re pretty broken flowers. We’ll take back what is ours. One day at a time.”

Something I’ve believed for decades: America is still in beta. There are plenty of bugs. Many features not yet implemented. The whole thing is likely to crash at anytime and a reboot may not fix it.

Always have a backup.

Today’s lesson: A tiny problem, unseen and undetected until too late, can cause major damage.

Example: A pinhole leak in the water supply (now repaired) is causing us to have to replace 1/4 of our kitchen ceiling.

Often times, it’s not the big projects that provide the most consistent regular satisfaction. It’s the small ones. The big ones fade into being commonplace. The small ones, the ones you touch every day, are like little doses of “ah”.

Installing cabinet magnets, for instance.