The connections between social media and polite society |
Social media is a return to a simpler age.
I can see the skepticism on your faces from here, but bear
with me. I think you’ll see the connection.
First, I’d like to invite you to remind yourselves of the
standards I, and a lot of you, were taught growing up. We were raised by certain
ideas about how to treat others. My mother and grandmother had a name for
it—polite society. Here are some of the basics, in case you’ve forgotten:
- If someone says something nice about you, thank them.
- When someone does something nice for you, do something nice for them.
- Always put others before yourself.
- If you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all.
It was a Do unto
others as you would have them do unto you world.
Navigate social media from what's familiar, not what's foreign |
These rules guided my behavior in almost all circumstances.
And they made the world I lived in pretty easy to navigate. We all operated
from a common basis, and everyone knew what was expected from everyone else.
These same basic rules are once again enjoying a
resurgence—on the Internet. Stay with me and consider our interaction on social
media, specifically Facebook and Twitter.
- If someone mentions you (which is a nice thing in this new, platform-building paradigm) you thank them.
- When others do something nice for you online, like telling people you have a great blog post, you tell your friends about their blogs.
- To keep from becoming a self-centered sounding boor, promote others online more than yourself. I know it’s counterintuitive, but it works every time. Those who promote others are always more popular and have more friends than those who are self-serving and self-promoting.
- And most important of all, when almost everything ever said online can still be found somewhere online—NEVER share an update that puts someone else down.
A golden-rule world |
It’s once again a golden-rule governed world.
So here's my challenge to you. We tend to focus on the difficulties of connecting to others through this new digital paradigm. Instead, what similarities have you found between connecting digitally and connecting physically with other people.
Don't forget to join the conversation!
Blessings
Edie
Note: This was taken from a post I wrote as a guest blogger for Linda Rondeau's Blog, http://geezerguysandgals.blogspot.com