This week on my podcast, I read "The Memex Method," my inaugural weekly column for @Medium, in which I reflect on 20 years' worth of blogging, and how it made me a better writer.
Blogging is the process by which I take everything that seems significant and fix it in my memory; the process of explaining why something seems significant for strangers is powerfully mnemonic in exactly the way that scrawling tones in a private notebook isn't.
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Do it long enough and your unconscious becomes a supersaturated solution of fragmentary ideas that click together, until they nucleate, crystalizing into nonfiction, fiction, essays, stories,novels.
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The fulltext, searchable, tagged database of everything I've ever given real thought to is how I synthesize whatever new things snag my attention into longer, more reflective pieces - which go into the searchable, tagged database, too.
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Blogging - as @cshirky observed many years ago - inverts the traditional "select, then publish" dynamic and turns it into "publish, then select" - where the reader acts as the editor, deciding which stories are worth their attention.
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But that inversion is only one of three. Blogging is a way to discover what your next book or essay or speech is about. Rather than being inspired and doing research, the blogging method is to do research to be inspired - to discover the book you never knew you had in you.
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The final inversion is in the audience. Rather than deciding what audience you want to appeal to (who will pay you or whom advertisers will pay to reach), this method involves creating the publication YOU'D want to read in order to discover the audience for it.
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I've written and published more than 20 books (novels, short story collections, graphic novels, YA, middle-grades, picture books, nonfiction, scholarly work) since I started blogging. Far from taking away time from "serious" writing, blogging made that work possible.
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Not just because it created a daily writing habit, nor because it helped me organize my thoughts - but also because it is iterative, a way of structuring and auditioning arguments for an audience that refines how to present technical, difficult material.
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ETA - If you'd like an unrolled version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
Jesus fucking christ, I'm STILL hearing from people who think viruses "adapt" by becoming less virulent over time, and that our immune systems "adapt" to viruses, meeting them halfway.
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For fuck's fucking sake.
Mutations produce both more dangerous and less dangerous strains (as well as strains that are indistinguishable from their parent strain).
Over the long run, a strain that kills its host can die off - because it kills all of its hosts.
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Likewise: over time, we can become more resistant to a virus as a species...after it kills off everyone whose immune system can't fight it off.
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The world's 125 poorest countries (2.5b people) have received zero covid vaccine doses to date. The 85 poorest countries project vaccination in 2023/24. This is #VaccineApartheid.
(If you'd like an unrolled version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:)
It's not that poor countries can't make their own vaccines. The Global South has a LOT of vaccine production capacity. The problem is Big Pharma, which refuses to transfer the patents and know-how to repurpose those facilities for mRNA production.
Attention foreigners! Allow me to describe the efficient market process of American private health care!
My daughter got her teeth cleaned.
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Four weeks later, our dental insurer sent us a note saying that they were paying for $235 out of the $236 bill (as our economist friends like to remind us, a co-pay gives the patient "skin in the game" and prevents frivolous teeth cleaning).
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A week after that, they mailed us a check, like, a piece of paper. I paid that check into our checking account and waited.
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