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Saturday, January 2, 2010

The One Week Digital Cleanse

I am on day 2 of The One week Digital Cleanse and so far so good. What is this One Week Digital Cleanse? John Mayer, one of, if not my favorite artist, floated this idea on his blog.
Mention to anyone with computer savvy that your laptop has somehow gotten slower over recent months and they’ll ask you the same thing: “have you defragmented your hard drive?” Defragmenting works by taking small slivers of information stored in various locations and consolidating them so that they’re in the same place on the drive and thus easier to access in larger chunks. Hard drive fragmentation is a great metaphor for - if not a literal manifestation of - what’s happened to our brains over years and years of processing small bursts of information. 2009 took fragmentation to a whole new level given the rise of Twitter and the social acceptance of texting people as a substitute to making phone calls.
That’s where the one week digital cleanse comes in. I’ll be defragmenting my mental and psychological hard drive during the first seven days of the new year, and I invite you all to participate.
Guidelines:

*email only from laptop or desktop computers



*cell phones can only be used to make calls, and no text messages or e-mails are allowed - if you receive a text, you must reply in voice over the phone. E-mails must be returned from a laptop or desktop computer.


*no use of Twitter or any other social networking site - this includes reading as well as posting.

*no visiting of any entertainment or gossip sites. (No need to detail which ones - you know what they are.)
I floated the idea last week on Twitter to see if anyone could envision themselves doing this, and the responses were interesting; some said they could definitely do it, but many were resigned to the idea, calling it impossible. If it is impossible, than my theory is already proven and we’re in big trouble as a society.



This can be done, people. Do it with me. When we pop back up on the grid on January 8, let’s trade stories on what it felt like, how hard it was, and maybe how hard it actually wasn’t.
JM
I honestly didn't think it would be THAT hard. I don't really text much at all, so that one is no big deal. And I rarely, if ever, go to entertainment or gossip sites. But I check and respond to emails and use Facebook and Twitter with my iPhone quite a bit. I do like me some Facebook and Twitter when I get the chance, at least several times a day. A minute here, a minute or two there. No big deal, right?

I'm two days in and it's going well, but it's harder than I thought it would be. The only part that is really bothering me is I can't gain extra entries in giveaways by tweeting!

How hard would it be for you to defragment? Do you think that the rise of Twitter, Facebook, and texting has changed our world for the worse?

3 comments:

Jillien said...

I think it would take a lot more than quitting facebook to defragment my jumbled mess of a mind. haha but it is a good challenge. I'm a FB addict. I wonder if i could accomplish it. Good luck

JM

FranticMommy said...

Hey you! WOW..that is intense! I could skip Twitter (which I don't understand any) but CrackBook..I mean Facebook would be harder. Mainly because it's such an important tool of my homebusiness. Personally I don't post there much. I will have to pop back and see how you did! You go girl!

Jenn@ You know... that blog? said...

Twitter I can live without - it's annoying anyway. But... no Facebook?

ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR MIND?!

Yeah... good luck with that, really. ;)

No really, good luck - and let me know if you feel less fragmented by next week, k? Explain how it feels, because I have no intention of ever finding out! MWAHAHAHA!!!

Happy New Year, my friend.

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