setting digital boundaries and carving a space to breathe
Balance. Pure and simple is something that I not only crave on daily basis, but strive to achieve. Am I always successful? Of course not. I work full-time, attend graduate school part-time, am a devoted wife, daughter, sister, and friend. I’m an advocate for digital literacy, a seeker of infinite information, a lover of art [...]
Balance.
Pure and simple is something that I not only crave on daily basis, but strive to achieve. Am I always successful? Of course not. I work full-time, attend graduate school part-time, am a devoted wife, daughter, sister, and friend. I’m an advocate for digital literacy, a seeker of infinite information, a lover of art and music (oh, and let’s not forget food and wine). However, the day does not simply allow for mindful, intentional implementation of all of the above. It’s hard enough to squeeze it all into a month.
The internet, the web, social media, technology, new technology, web 2.0, whatever you call it, is the conduit for my true passion: communication, collaboration, access to information and an ability to share stories, experiences and knowledge on a global scale. That’s truly what I love about the internet.
I’m finding it all becoming way to intermixed – my personal, professional and academic lives, my purchasing behavior and my constant knowledge consumption. To some, this is the point and opportunity within the context of the web. I don’t want to be an opportunity. I want to present opportunities to others, be attentive to those around me, the missions I hold dear and the stories I wish to share – perhaps all in the altruistic hope of changing the world.
To do this, I’m setting boundaries – digital ones.
Facebook will be for my personal relationships of fairly direct connection. Twitter, that’s still to be determined. LinkedIn, is the place to continue to connect with me as is my blog. My blog was the space that first spoke to me and this is where I return. The increasing constraint of character restrictions is not me. Anyone who knows me knows this and knows the my thoughts are far too verbose.
The question that lies is my profession and career aspirations involve the web and it’s infinite platforms. Am I less knowledgeable of the web, social media or technology, because I’m no longer juggling 100+ social networks at a time. No, in fact, it’s just the opposite. Expect more from me, so much more, because that’s the point of establishing boundaries. There will be more of me, my true self, to go around. I’m carving out a space to breathe, think about it, when’s the last time to carved out space of your own to reassess, re-energize and to simply be.
left behind bottle caps
are the miscellaneous moments of life we tuck away and the pieces of wisdom we collect daily
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
archives
- March 2011 (1)
- February 2011 (2)
- November 2010 (4)
- October 2010 (1)
- August 2010 (1)
- July 2010 (1)
- June 2010 (5)
- May 2010 (1)
- March 2010 (1)
- February 2010 (4)
- January 2010 (4)
- December 2009 (2)
- November 2009 (1)
- June 2009 (4)
- May 2009 (1)
- April 2009 (8)
- March 2009 (3)
- January 2009 (2)
- December 2008 (12)
- November 2008 (4)
- October 2008 (9)
- September 2008 (4)
- June 2008 (2)
- April 2008 (2)
- February 2008 (7)
- January 2008 (4)
- December 2007 (8)
- November 2007 (24)
- October 2007 (21)
- September 2007 (3)

