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Ok. I'll stick with @chrisbrogan
It's effective!
The medium itself, perhaps social media as a whole, tends to reward those who speak out vs. those who are silent, and I think for those who are less prone to or comfortable with speaking out, verbosity and confidence may be read as a lack of humility, when someone simply may be "being themself." Silence is at its best observered publicly, and @rickwolf 's comments are spot-on about its virtue and value.
As for humility, like many I have much to learn, and in particular that confidence and humility go hand-in-hand to making one effective in releationships and in the marketplace. Where I work, we spend much time training our workers to be confident (especially in front of customers) and at the same time to be incredible listeners and to value others supremely.
On you're other point- a couple months ago I posted a funny conversation I had with Sarah Vela over Twitter, Seesmic, & Utterz, pasting it all together in my blog :).
http://banannie.com/blog/2008/03/05/how_to_have/
These words which USED to mean something, but in the age of PC (that's "political-correctness", which bears _no_ relation to our host, PC!) are now firmly established newspeak.
Pride USED to mean the excessive love of one's own excellence.
And Humility USED to mean the virtue "by which a man knows himself as he truly is" [which is limited and imperfect.]
By these definitions, Humility is a prerequisite for many things, such as learning and does not preclude tooting your own horn.
Pride on the other hand, is never good because because it is excessive, and therefore always getting in the way, stopping
you from getting something even better.
Seeking attention, or being bold and courageous, is not necessarily Prideful. But it is Prideful if not humble in doing it.
Being silent is not necessarily humble. It can be Prideful.
OK, coming down from my prideful philosophical stump....
I think the social media Internet is way biased towards "the instant." The adrenaline rush is fun and all, but constant demands for reactive interactions is stressful. It's either fight or flight. Get it out of the way and move on.
I think we humans have a pretty good internal "Bogus Spew" detector, and can tell what's puffery and what is not. (Maybe its because we are saturated with advertisements every 5 minutes on TV, and every second on the web, and can be critical.)
But it is Brave New World to have to decide how to filter it all.
I think the antonym to "instant" is "relationship." Twitter and other social media can permit that, but it's a LOT of work to engender relationship in the current UIs.
These UIs seem to be specifically designed to distract, not focus.
More page views. More clicks. More banners. More sidebar gadgets. Think less. Click more.
Anyone agree?
- Forrest
4 out of 5 victims agree....The best food for trolls is silence.
Confessing this creed defines whether you are Christian or not,
for all branches of Christianity, back to the Apostles.
Anyway.
It never fails to amaze me how people can so tightly latch on to the idea that the Internet is "just words on a screen". This of course does nothing but permit and perpetuate Internet abuses of all kinds. And it's a shame.