This is a topic I have thought a lot about, for many years. In fact, my undergraduate thesis in Philosophy (how is that for a useless major?) was on Aristotle's concepts of public and private as they relate to who is responsible for educating children, the future members of society.
Several people have asked when I am I going to blog, really blog, about Africa. And the truth is, I've tried a few times this summer to write an entry that could truly capture the experience, and I just cannot come up with it. Those who have communicated with me since my return either in person or through e-mail, could probably confirm that there is just an energy, an aura that is the direct result of my time there that simply cannot be conveyed over a blog post. It's not any one thing ... it was everything from being up close to wildlife I only dreamed about, to attending a conference addressing issues which I personally believe to be defining ones for my generation, climbing a mountain, and so much more.
Since returning from Africa, there has been so much going in my professional and personal lives, very little of which I would be comfortable sharing with the World Wacky Web. And since I've always blogged about things that are simply top of mind, it's been hard to come up with a blog entry recently. I guess I would rather not blog at all, than write an entry that isn't authentically representative of what's going on with me, or what I am thinking about.
One of the many outstanding people I met in Africa, told me about
how he had read my blog ahead of the conference, and enjoyed it in
large part because of its authenticity. That I wrote exactly what I
was thinking, with little filtering. And that meeting me in person
ultimately proved to be remarkably similar to "meeting" me via my blog
... in other words, there was little difference between my online
persona and my real life character.
Am not sure how I feel about that. I have to believe that a blog -
even the best written, most personal ones - can only begin to capture a
fraction of the complexity that makes each of us individuals just that:
an individual. Certainly, at least I would like to think there is a
lot more going on in here [pointing to my head] than what I express on
my blog. And what I've learned the last few weeks is that sometimes, a lot of this [again, pointing to my head] cannot be conveyed in this medium.
Technorati Tags: blogging, privacy
Note: Even though the date for this entry reads 29 June 2007, that is simply when I started the draft of this entry. I published this entry on 15 August 2007.