After a few years off social network and a hiatus off the surface web, I'm back! A few years ago, as I am working from home, I realized that anytime spent on social network, couldn't be able to billed to anyone but myself. I then realized that even after work, spending time on social network felt like work, not for myself, but for the owner of these networks. I wanted to create content that would be liked, I wanted to expand my follower group. I had to follow a certain algorithm, a certain guideline to fit on the platform. While drawing, I wondered if people would like it, when writing, I carefully chose my subject and word, for the platform, not for my self expression. What had started as a collective playground, had become a highly profitable network, abused by a handful. To add to the mix, I felt very vulnerable to the addiction of voyeurism to other users, and the constant pull to consume more media. I dropped off the social media bandwagon 7 years ago. I had a few relapse, trying things out, trying mastodon, but I was still damaged by all that experience. I even gave up all forums and such and online chat. It started a wave of minimalism, cutting down amazon, apple, meta, adobe. I'd google myself to see if there was any other platform I was on. I removed myself from SoudCloud, vimeo, tumblr, github and many more accounts that was linked to me. I had to go through about 30 online accounts and it took over a year. At the same time I wanted to continue to write. I've been writing for a local newspaper for the last 10 years, but even that wasn't satisfying anymore. Too many rules made my writing stale after a while. I wanted to write online, but couldn't find the right platform. I tried wordpress, ghost, writefreely, moving from more complex to simpler platform, yet my hacker's brain wasn't satisfied. I didn't want to be online when I wrote, and I didn't want to be limited by a editor of any sort. I wanted the pure, full experience of simply writing. That's when I discovered gopher, about 3 years ago. The ease at which I could write and publish, the very small yet active community was a perfect match for my exploration of my writings. I found a new voice on gopher, as it was semi public, I didn't have to censor myself too much. None of my family members, and most of my friends wouldn't be able to read me. I could be really raw about my experiences, to an extreme, that has made some readers uncomfortable, and the tool set I would use (vim and scp) was so minimal I couldn't have wished for better. So I went pretty much off the surface web altogether for a time. Gopher, anonradio chat, broadcasting my radio show was all that I needed. I still lurked online for a while. One of the place I would keep an eye on was merveilles.town. I had interviewed Devin on my show, and through him I discovered this mastodon server. But that lurking became more, and more and more. News site, 4chan, and bit too much youtube, until I got fully addicted to the tube. During my separation this summer, spending most of my evening on youTube had become my drug. I'd spend hours losing myself to a bunch of useless videos. Couldn't stop until pass midnight. I felt less alone, I felt like someone was talking to me. The algorithm was really precise, showing me channels of other depressed people, talking to the tube, sharing their depression and burn out. It was a therapy while my mind was being abused to keep me on the platform for hours. But in the last few weeks, I replace that addiction with other online addiction. It was a strange feeling, but sometime I have to fool myself to change radically. It took on a very strange turn as you can read in my last entry but then something changed. Just as the solstice came, the darkest day of the year, everything shifted. I cut through my stuff, and pivoted in a new direction. I wanted to come back to the surface web, and the only place I would have wanted to be was on merveilles.town. I've seen many other mastodon servers, but on each of them I would often get triggered. I might be over- sensitive for these things, but I feel a lot of people express themselves violently. It's often subtle, people are not swearing or being mean, but by taking a certain stance, and expressing that stance in a certain way, I feel triggered to answer, even if I agree with the statement, I want to counter the comment with something different. So on the solstice, I contacted Devin and checked-in if it was possible to join. As simple as it might sound, this was quite a shift. It had a very calming effect on me. A peaceful resolution between the surface web and I. It made me want to polish some of my online presence and get back in communication with different people and groups I've lost touch with. This is all an experiment. I hope it sticks, but it seems to already have a positive effect on my creativity and my desire to share more, in a different way. It's important to create and share. This process diversify the culture we live in, birthing islands of realities that welcomes a certain type of people. Abstaining from creating and sharing feels like surrendering to the mass media taking over our realities.