I WILL say things online that I wouldn’t say in person
#2711. Keskiviikko, 11. huhtikuuta 2007 klo 15.24.08, kirjoittanut Jani. 4
It is no secret to people who know me (either by my writings or IRL) that I have some serious issues with face to face social interactions. Call it shyness or call it by some other, more clinical name, I am not what you would call a normal person in my interactions with people, not even by Finnish standards. I am quiet to the extent that people tend to notice and comment upon it virtually every time I’m in a situation with others around me. They usually think I am deeply troubled by something in my life when in fact the only thing troubling me is the current situation of being around them. #
Now, even if you knew the way I was, it is possible you didn’t know the way I feel in such situations. #
The most prominent feeling I have around people is usually fear. Most of the time I have to keep my hands clinged to some other part of my body just to hide the fact that I’m shaking. It’s as if I was in a constant fear of being physically attacked by those around me, simply because of my own being physically around them. (Such an incident has never occured, mind you. I’m just making an analogy, because the true causes of my fear are pretty abstract and not fully known even to myself at this time.) #
If you are what would probably be called a normal person in this respect, you might feel the same way about making a presentation to a room full of strange people. By imagining this you may see that for me, saying most things in person is usually just out of the picture entirely. It’s not that I didn’t have things to say (though my head is usually just empty, as might happen to you while making a presentation - a nightmare come true, isn’t it?), it’s just that I’m way too frightened to say them. #
Probably the last obstacle for me is that while all this is happening, I’m fully aware of how abnormal my behaviour must seem. I know that I’m not expected to be making a presentation to a room full of strangers, I just feel like I am, and I cannot accept my own inadequacy and so deem it better to just not open my mouth at all. #
But online it’s different. #
Out here, no one can see the physical symptoms of how nervous I am about saying something. My heart may be pounding like I was running the marathon, I may be shaking like I had Parkinson’s - and nobody knows about it! In other words, the final obstacle for my being able to say things has suddenly disappeared entirely. #
You can probably see where I’m getting at with this: to me, saying I should limit the things I should say to what I would say in person is like saying I should shut up entirely. Obviously, I won’t accept that. Obviously, I find it even hurtful to be suggested that. This online world to me and others like me is a place where we’ve found freedom from our worst fears, a place where we can behave the way other people find natural to behave in face to face situations. And now you’re telling us we should go back to the way we are outside this world? No way Jose. #
Now, you may be thinking that “oh, but you’re just an exception, not accounted for by the rule.” Wrong. Though I probably do represent an extreme case, I’m hardly alone in my situation. But what’s more important is that we’re all on the same scale here. We’re all limited to some extent in what we dare to say in person, and it’s not due to what you might want to think: that without such reservations, anarchy would reign. If your thinking really went down that path just now, I have news for you: you’re fooling yourself in order to keep your overly positive self-image intact. #
This also allows you to play the part of a total dickhead, agreed, but I argue that it is also an extreme case and not the rule. It is a minority that totally loses it and becomes a so-called cyberbully when given a little more freedom than face to face interactions do. Otherwise anarchy really would reign, in the online world. The fact that it doesn’t, to me is a proof that people already know how to be civil enough to allow for social structures in cyberspace. Because there is less anxiety resulting from face to face interaction, these structures are bound to be different from their real-world counterparts. This is why I see attempts to impose real-world rules onto online discussions as deeply troubling, violent attempts to rip apart its natural flow of things, and my own safe haven from my fears. #
(Tästä merkinnästä on myös suomenkielinen versio.) #
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