Smaller rooms lead to bigger doors
A mix of clouds and sun during the morning will give way to cloudy skies this afternoon.
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The days of posting to social media and a million “things” happening are ending. It was all a house of cards, smoke-and-mirrors.
Yes, there were winners along the way (even today, I know), but the casino has to pay out occasionally, or else people stop visiting.
Writes Kening Zhu in ‘the internet as a creative practice’:
“You cannot truly embody a creative practice in an environment that exploits attention for profit, where you’re pushed to measure your “success” according to metrics of validation. This system encourages that the creative act, not be embodied and lived, but performed and pantomimed.”
I don’t think we set out to optimize, hack, and short-cut our way to more subscribers, shares, likes, and comments.
I wanna run in the woods. You might want to go on more photo walks, or set up a studio, or write a book.
These things take time, so why must our work happen at top speed? What if we slow down, instead?
What does it look like if downshift our efforts and seek deeper connections with just a few great people, more so than growing audience at all costs?
Look at this London Creatives meet up that artist
recently led:The tech bro pipe dream marketing machine wants us to believe that their platforms are the creative epicenter, but look at that photo above - not an algorithm in sight, just vibes.
What would that look like for you? Maybe not an in-person gathering, but an occasional video call? An accountability group but with postcards instead of daily check-ins? The possibilities are limited only by your imagination
Because look - posting to social media is so easy our parents can do it. Organizing a time and location to meet with other creative folks and share your wins and challenges? Now, that’s hard, and that’s precisely why you should do it.
I know, I know - social media is right there. Just so easy to post. Hit like. RT something.
We’ll just keep hitting those buttons and pulling the levers, along with the 10,000 other artists and musicians and photographers, every minute of every day, around the clock.
“The next post will be a winner, I can feel it!”
Or maybe instead of posting that meme for “everyone,” we share it with one or two people in our contacts list.
Could some of our connections grow deeper if we just made that effort? Instead of “engaging” in another comments thread, what if we sent a DM or email to one or two people this week?
And what if we stopped obsessing over our stats?
There’s always one more goal, metric to measure, and level to reach. Capitalism is about constant growth and the pursuit of more.
Stop looking at your stats and seek good energy instead.
Opportunities can come from the people we already know, the connections we make today, and the relationships we’ve had for decades.
Let’s slow down our desire for more and realize what’s right in front of us.
I’m Seth Werkheiser, and I enjoy talking to creative people about newsletters (I also do email marketing operations for Grammy Award-winning MNRK Heavy). Check out my About page to see how I can help.
Loved this. Preach.
You and I are definitely vibing this morning, Seth!
https://substack.com/@ascottperry/note/c-61397025