First, let me clearly assert that I’m a fan of Twitter. How four guys from a podcasting company came up with this microblogging concept during a brainstorming session is a testament to the old adage that there are no stupid ideas – just ideas that haven’t been properly capitalized. That brainstorming session yielded what is now a $2.5 billion company with 319 million active users worldwide.
By comparison, the total population of the U.S. is 325 million.
Nice brainstorming.
Twitter is, in fact, the perfect vehicle for the short-attention-span society in which we are inescapably entrenched. We’ve all developed attention deficit purely as a defense mechanism that allows us to consume the mass quantities of information now available at our collective fingertips.
Many of us in the field of government communications, PR, marketing or whatever flavor of information dispersal to which you ascribe, have found Twitter to be a useful writing exercise. The ability to form a coherent message in a limited space is a challenge that we frequently embrace. As such, again for many of us, the ability to use, strategically plan for and leverage social media is not just a desired skill – it has become part of the job description.
And, Twitter is only 14 years old.
At times of breaking news and rapidly evolving developments, Twitter, along with other social media, has evolved into a critically important tool for relating details of violent coups in foreign lands, emergency alerts for impending severe weather and proof of life to mark oneself “safe” after natural or manmade disasters.
Let’s focus on the undeniable impact that social media has had on American discourse as a whole. Yes, with the stroke of a few keys we can stay in touch with people from our past that would have otherwise faded into the background vignettes of distant memory. There is certainly value to that. Still, it seems that human nature continues to look for the shortcut and resorts to the smartphone as its exclusive means of communicating the most sparse details possible, before moving on to the next Tweet, post or text.
In my home office, I have a box of notes, postcards and letters that my father wrote home to his parents in Greenwood, Louisiana during his tours in Europe and the Pacific towards the end of World War II. To me, these are beyond value.
It is worth noting that none of us were forced into reducing our myriad thoughts, emotions and complexities of the human experience into 140 (ok, 280) characters. We hopped on this held-together-with-duct-tape-bandwagon voluntarily. It doesn’t mean we should abandon books, and long-form journalism and actually writing letters to each other. OK, email qualifies, but make it a series of graceful thoughts in carefully composed sentences.
Abraham Lincoln wrote 10 sentences on the back of an envelope while on a train to Pennsylvania. His address at the dedication of the cemetery at Gettysburg is not remembered for Lincoln’s speaking style, but for the tender, meaningful and moving words that echo still.
If Lincoln were alive today, would he Tweet? Probably. But, I’d like to think they’d be remarkably elegant thoughts that would still be combined with soaring orations and letters, both business and personal, that conveyed the very essence of his message in descriptive and impactful terms that people would treasure.
So, how do we avoid the fate of our era fading into that vague background of collective societal memory?
HOW TO SAVE SOCIETY FROM RHETORICAL OBLIVION
1.Write a journal.
2. Don’t stop Tweeting, but be deliberate in language and memorable in manner.
3. Write letters (even in email) that are thought provoking and emotionally intelligent.
4. Agree to disagree. Respect isn’t dead, it’s just ailing.
5. Don’t stop reading. Consume information, lots of it. The best way to form a coherent stance on matters of the day is not to limit your news to a single source. Read, listen and watch from a variety of sources for the most well-rounded opinion you can muster.
It is, in fact, just that simple.
© 2017 | Tom Bryson III, CPC | All rights reserved
Originally published on GovLoop.com