2015 Blogging Recap

So, I’ve been looking at my blog posts for 2015 and find a few interesting things. Often, I write one blog post a day. Some days, I write more than one, and sometimes I go without putting up a blog post. There have been long periods where I’ve put up a blog post every day. For 2015, I ended up putting up 364 blog post, one post short of an average of one post a day.

For 2015, my average blog post was just shy of 300 words. My total for the year was slightly over 100,000 words, or the equivalent of two NaNoWriMo first drafts.

Each blog post was directly accessed an average of 473 times, based on the blog software data. There are times this varies from Google analytics data, and this data doesn’t really say how often a blog post was read, because often people come to the front page of the blog or to one of the category pages. In such cases, they can usually read up to five posts on a single page, but I don’t know how may they really read. It’s probably fair to say that for 2015, my average blog post was read around 500 times.

My most popular blog post for 2015 was My Cartoon Superheros. It tied to an effort to fill Facebook with comic book heroes for one reason or another.

The next three most popular posts were related to #rhizo15. While I don’t have nice statistics to support this, I believe these were also the posts that received the most comments.

Not included in these statistics is that many of my most popular posts were written in previous years.

So, the plan for 2016 remains similar to my plan for 2015. Try to average a post a day, with an average post of 300 words and each post read an average of 500 times. I expect more of my posts will be about poetry and religion and less on politics and technology which have often driven much of my traffic. My hopes are that in spite of this shift I’ll have more readers and more engagement for 2016. I especially hope that my posts will have more impact, along the lines I described in Shaping Ava.

What are your blog and social media plans for 2016?

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Shaping Ava

Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit. Happy New Year! We perform our rituals, say our incantations in hopes that, somehow, this year will be better. For a day, we forget the quote attributed to Einstein, “Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results”, and make the same resolutions.

This year, I’ve been seeing a quote attributed to Mark Twain making the rounds, “New Year's Day--Now is the accepted time to make your regular annual good resolutions. Next week you can begin paving hell with them as usual.”

Last night, we had a YouTube Riff Off. This is a game we play where one person plays a song on YouTube, and the next person riff’s off of that tune, selecting some other tune the first tune made them think of. We go around and around as one tune leads to another and one mood gives way to the next. It is interesting to observe what emerges.

We started off with Auld Lang Syne and went to songs about children growing up, Cat’s Cradle, Circle Game. We went to the sending off phase of Black Parade and Carry on my Wayward son, to remembrances, in “Will you remember me”, “Box of Rain” and “Ode to Billie Joe” The Riff off culminated in a nod to religious coexistence in The Kennedys’ song Stand.

Perhaps it reflected some of the themes for the coming year, as Fiona potentially heads off to school and I explore more deeply my religious calling.

Afterwards, we watched “Ex Machina”. I’ve been interested in AI’s for a long time and remember a saying that AIs would end up looking like their creators. Back then, the folks working on AI were nerdy engineers. In Ex Machina, the guy creating the AI is a reclusive genius. The software for the AI is the large search engine he has created and made his fortunes off of.

It is an idea that has fascinated me for a long time. What if our search engines and social networks are the new AIs, or at least the source of information for these AIs about social behavior? Seem unlikely? It’s already happening.

IBM's new Insights service harvests data from millions of tweets and uses Watson to analyze them for sentiment and behavior

IBM'S Watson Can Figure Out A Lot About You—Just By Looking At Your Social Media

IBM Is Using Watson To Psychoanalyze People From Their Tweets

Matters Of The Mind: Mass. Computer Scientist Creates Technology To Read Emotions

So, are we now just pawns, nodes in some giant AI? Are the results of the 2016 U.S. Presidential campaign already predetermined? Does it matter who gets elected anyway? Are we just amplifying echoes in the social media echo chamber when we like or share messages about Trump, Bernie, or Hillary?

Can we shape Ava? If so, how?

It seems easy to be discouraged when you look at all the issues our country and our world faces. Will what I write help shift the direction of climate change? Will what I write help bring an end to oppression; to racism or sexism?

I chose to remain optimistic. I think Robert Kennedy’s quote provides some insight.

Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring those ripples build a current which can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance.

Here, we could go off into a long discussion about whether sharing posts that reflect our political or religious views counts as standing up for an ideal. We could talk about slacktivism and whether we are just going back to paving the road to hell. Yet that, too, most likely leads to hopelessness and inaction.

Instead, I think David Foster Wallace presents a more useful way of looking at it in his commencement speech, This Is Water

The really important kind of freedom involves attention, and awareness, and discipline, and effort, and being able truly to care about other people and to sacrifice for them, over and over, in myriad petty little unsexy ways, every day. That is real freedom. The alternative is unconsciousness, the default-setting, the “rat race” — the constant gnawing sense of having had and lost some infinite thing.

Perhaps this is the real challenge, for the new year, for each day, in shaping Ava, to challenge the default settings, to pay attention, to be aware, not only to the trending topics on Facebook or Twitter, but to the simple things around us, the beauty of the squirrel running in the woods, probably the same squirrel that has been raiding your bird feeder, the common humanity of the homeless guy you see on the street.

Happy New Year.

Continuous Partial Discernment

Sitting on the verge of 2016, I wonder what sort of year it will be. Friends are posting about the presidential election. They are reflecting on racial injustices that continue to this day. They are concerned about climate change. They are making plans for celebrations for this evening and resolutions for the coming year.

My resolution for the coming year is to seek a better understanding of what God is calling me to do. There is a specific process for this for those who believe God may be calling them to ordained priesthood in the Episcopal Church, the discernment process.

Starting in a couple weeks, I will begin meeting regularly with a small group of people who will pray with me, study scripture together, and help me seek a better understanding of what God is calling me to. I view this as a wonder gift to me, and I hope it will be a wonderful gift for them as well.

Some of my early thoughts about this have been to explore how much I can share this online as well. The Discernment Manual of the Episcopal Church in Connecticut talks about the importance of maintaining confidentiality. “What is said here stays here. It is not appropriate to tell someone else’s story.” It is extremely difficult to maintain confidentiality online, so I won’t be posting stories from my discernment committee meetings online, although I hope to share some of the insights I’ve gained and further explore these insights online.

Yet as I think about it, the discernment process I will be going through seems limited in several ways. It is focused on people seeking discernment about becoming ordained priests. Yet we all should be seeking discernment. It takes place for a couple hours every other week, over a period of several months. Yet it seems we should all be seeking discernment constantly; praying without ceasing.

How do we do this, as we also pay attention to what is going on around us, like paying attention to the cars around us as we drive? It seems the idea of continuous partial attention by Linda Stone.

To pay continuous partial attention is to pay partial attention — CONTINUOUSLY. It is motivated by a desire to be a LIVE node on the network. Another way of saying this is that we want to connect and be connected.

How do we connect with God, and God’s creatures around us? Is that what we are doing when we scan through our social media feeds? What do we do with our feelings of outrage, compassion, awe, or gratitude? Are we seeking to discern how best to react?

My daughter who is building a tiny house talks about her goal of reconnecting art to daily life. I think this is part of continuous partial discernment. We need to recognize, create, and share art, things that are beautiful, things that have meaning. We need to have outrage at injustice and oppression, and seek discernment on how we can best address such injustice and oppression. Is it enough to click like? To share a link? To donate to a cause? What are we called to do?

How do we seek continuous partial discernment in the twenty first century?

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The Labyrinth

A cold rain blows
across the labyrinth
on a hill
on Block Island
as I kneel down
to touch the pebbles;
symbols
of hopes and dreams
of earlier
pilgrims.

That he might see me.
That I might find the courage
to say, “Hi.”
For our life together.
That we might find a home.
For my job, my career.
For the life growing
inside my womb.
That he might conquer his addiction.
That she beats the cancer.
For a better world.
That my life
might have true meaning.
That her final days
might be peaceful,
happy,
and pain free.
For those that mourn.

I kneel down
and touch the pebbles,
as I search for my own hope
my own desires.

To help others
reach theirs.

The Singularity

The folk of birds
flew in tight formation
as it they were one being
made of many
and I thought
maybe
the singularity
is already here
made of many.

The flock of Facebook,
Google,
Fox News,
ABC, NBC, CBS, PBS,
America,
England,
France,
Russia,
Germany,
Italy,
Japan,
Protestant,
Catholic,
Muslim,
Jew,
has evolved
beyond comprehension
through the use
of new technologies,
while we
the nodes
have evolved
little.

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