Am I addicted to the internet? I scoffed at my husband when
he said yes. I work on my computer I insisted. I don’t play video games or
text. My use of Facebook is for promoting my writing personae and my books, not
to be social as in chat with friends. I tweet about my friends’ blogs or new
books, not my dog or cat. I have my books listed on GoodReads, Shelfari and
LibraryThing and belong to a few groups devoted to reading.
I use Triberr as a huge timesaver to keep my contacts active
and I limit it to one visit a day.
Am I addicted to the internet? When I was hacked I
discovered, to my horror, that I am. If you call going into cold sweats when I
couldn’t connect a problem.
Oh yeah. I realized I needed that daily dive into the wide
wide world of cyberspace. I couldn’t concentrate on other things like writing
my book or blog. My contact list was gone. I was essentially alone on a cold
plane of reality.
This is not a funny as it sounds. For four days I
frantically worked to get my loops and groups back into my life. I had a temper
tantrum. I ate continuously. On the fifth day I realized I was acting like a
nut. I hadn’t written anything productive in days. The real focus of my life,
my writing, had somewhere gotten lost in the shuffle and I sat down for a long
look at my work habits.
I used to get on my computer right after breakfast and write
until lunch. Most days I did housework, exercise or fun stuff in the afternoon.
I didn’t work on the weekends, choosing to do stuff with my family. That had
changed. I got on the internet. I spent anywhere from an hour to two or three
daily. Even weekends have become a part of the cyber-flow.
What should I do?
For one thing, I’ve written more on my book in the last week
than I have in the past month. I let my groups and loops slide. I’m not sure
what’s happening and although I miss my contact with on-line friends I’m
refocusing.
I made a couple decisions about time on the net. I visit
Triberr before breakfast. It’s quicker that early and I’m off in less than 20
minutes. I am slowly revisting the sites I joined to promote my books and
taking a look at each. If I’m not using it to my benefit why am I there? What
is the most efficient use? Often I don’t know and I shake my head. What am I
doing?
As to my addiction, I recognized I have a problem. I am
limiting the time I spend on the net by putting a limit on its use.
The best thing I’ve done is to make a list of places that
need attention and the time I will devote to each. This is a serious work in
progress.
Are you also in denial? Are you addicted to the internet?
Visit me at my updated Author Website: http://barbaraedwards.net
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4 comments:
Barbara,
More excellent advice from you. Look at the service you've performed today. Lucky us to be able to search deeply into the souls of our internet lives without having been hacked. I, for one, would like to thank you.
I'm glad my blog helped you, Margo. You're welcome.
My girls say I'm addicted. Maybe it's true, but my excuses sound a lot like yours. I spend about an hour each morning doing promo - tweeting and commenting on FB, reading a few (very few) blogs and commenting, answering email, checking to see if my sales rank went up or down on Amazon. Okay that last one is probably completely unnecessary (and depressing!) Then I write. When I need a short break, I check email and FB. I probably do this WAY to often. Time to take a hard look at my habits!
I knew I was addicted when I couldn't make myself do something else. Scary to lose control.
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