copyright 2011, Marcia
Applegate
My
opinion: Twitter is quick communication on the fly, but using it effectively
requires some thought to shorten the ideas so they can be properly and fully
communicated in 140 characters. Not thinking ahead risks serious or hilarious
misunderstandings.
Above
graf in Twitter-speak: Tweets quick, concise, think 140, preview gets clarity
& no regret, no joke.
Problem:
Thinking clearly and expressing it concisely requires forethought, sometimes a
considerable amount spent mulling it over. But we don’t always have that time
to spend analyzing our tweets. That’s where we get ourselves in the soup.
Admittedly, the first illustrative graf above isn’t something that I would be
likely to put on Twitter in the first place; Twitter isn’t designed for
philosophical musing.
And
I am a writer who writes, then writes again, then rewrites, then rewrites
again, and so on, until I finally decide that I’m done, finis, end of story,
30, and I’m satisfied that what I’ve written is the clearest way of saying
what I want to say. Someone else can disagree, but that’s okay.
The
first illustration, the long one, I wrote on the fly, and went back a couple of
times to tweak the wording a little, Miss Thistlebottom/wordsmith that
I am. It’s simply opinion, and doesn’t have any content that would get me in
trouble if I dashed it off in 140 characters and sent it on its way. It’s
innocuous in its message, and even if shortened without thought probably
wouldn’t have offended my intended audience. (You weren’t, were you?)
What
is most remarkable here—and it may be the result of age-related mental slowdown
and the need to search for words, especially that exactly-right word that is
tickling the back of my mind—is that the second illustration took me about
three times as long to put together as the original longer version. And I had
the printed version to look at, not just an amorphous opinion floating in my
head that I wanted to pass on to the wide world out there in ether-land.
What
made me start on this philosophical it’s-just-my-opinion binge was when I was
tweeting about a new posting on my blog, mkamysterylady.com, the tweet
exceeded the 140-character limit and I needed to shorten it. Substituting
shorter words of course is the only repair, but you have to come up with
appropriate ones; for one word I went to dictionary.com to choose a
short-enough synonym.
Once
I got that tweet into the proper number of characters, I then put up a couple
more tweets and found myself automatically and instantly grasping for a short
word every time. That’s a good thing, huh, tweet-wise? Well, maybe so, but I’m
not sure.
I’ve
read lots of concerns, criticisms and cautions from people who use Twitter, some who
have been using it since its inception; I’m a newbie just beginning to use
social media since I have a blog I want to share. Some people love Twitter for
its brevity, some share my opinion, some really don’t care, just put some words
up and let it fly.
But
even from my newbie, short-timer point of view, it seems to me that the effect
of thinking in 140 characters probably is not a good thing over the long-term
for English—or whatever language one speaks. This potential for negative
results from Twitter on language probably won’t be fully addressed until some
Twitter users begin to realize that their everyday vocabularies are basically
non-existent except for a very long lexicon of very short words. I find myself
asking about my own Twitter prognosis:
- When am I going to start thinking in short bursts, no longer able to give mind space to complex concepts that require thinking and rethinking, much the way my written words require rewriting before I get them right?
- Will my need to be short and concise when tweeting lead to being short and concise when thinking, then speaking in short bursts of teeny tiny words?
- Then will I regress from tweetspeak to babytalk?
- Will I then become unable to speak at all when my list of short words gets depleted beyond speech?
- Will there be, sometime in the future, a medically accepted definition of a specific type of aphasia/dementia related to many years of tweeting? Twitterentia? Tweetdementia?
Obviously,
my tongue is firmly implanted in my cheek and my opinion is an exaggeration as
I write it in 2011, but my point still has a certain degree of validity,
especially for people who are heavy users of Twitter and have been doing the
140-character tango for many years.
Above
graf in Twitter-speak: Sarcastic but point valid, too much time on 140-characters,
bad? Less time, more brain, good? Hyperbole? Who knows.
Only
time will tell.
The
constant advance of technology will very likely solve the problem for us in the
future. What that solution might be I can only imagine. Maybe some software
that will let us highlight a paragraph, click a “Twitterize” button, and it
automatically will convert the text, whatever length it is originally, into 140
characters.
Now,
what fun that promises to be. If you’ve ever tried a speech-to-text program,
you probably know what I mean.
***
About Marcia Applegate:
I'm a retired communications consultant with major firms, writer, columnist, and blogger, now living in Asheville N.C. We moved here from Chicago. We love Asheville's culture and quirkiness, the gorgeous mountains and the interesting and welcoming people.
We still miss Chicago, though, and visit when we can. We have children, grandchildren, and great-grands scattered across the country. I've been reading and writing all my life, for pay and for fun. Love all kinds, especially mysteries. Now for fun, I'm reviewing on my blog much of what I read, and have lots and lots of opinions on this and that.
Here are some links to some other opinions I've posted on mkamysterylady.com. I'd love your comments, if you choose to drop by. While you're there, do take a look at the posted reviews. I hope you'll enjoy the read.
An English newspaper claims mysteries aren't literary.
What makes a good review, from one reviewer's perspective.
Some thoughts on revenge in mystery and in life.
A rant about overdone, overblown, overdrawn melodrama.
2 comments:
Marcia - I love this piece! Thank you for guest blogging with us today, we always enjoy your wit and wisdom!!
Aaron . . . This is so much fun. My daughter-in-law asked me how I'd feel if I got nasty comments. I said good is better, but I'll take all kinds since they show that somebody is reading! Again, thanks so much for your help as I learn my way around the blogging world.
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