This evening I rediscovered a friend of mine. A greatly beloved friend. A neglected friend.
I did not find this friend via Facebook. I did not receive a random phone call, text, or email, and I did not accidentally bump into this friend down the street. Yet we still met.
Our conversation was stilted at first. It was awkward. It was sad. We used to be *so* close, we had talked for hours... shared so many precious moments... laughed, cried, and danced together... But tonight neither of us knew what to say.
After the initial embarrassment over our estranged relationship had passed, we started interacting. Slowly, cautiously interacting, but it was contact. And it was beautiful.
So who exactly is this friend and how did we reconnect?
Meanwhile... I have decided to leave Facebook, a move I have been contemplating seriously since university started back 8 weeks ago. I'm in my 3rd year of my Bachelor of Music degree, and I want to make the most of the opportunities university presents me with. With my health still unstable, I am trying to be smarter with my time this year, a task made a lot harder by the soporific drug that is Facebook! I confess, I have found that any time I need a break from study my internet browser effortlessly finds its way to Facebook, and suddenly a 5-minute break escalates to 30 minutes or more. There are too many photos to view, games to play, comments, perspectives, and debates to follow. I could shrug off my frequent procrastination and argue that I am merely 'connecting' with my friends, some of whom I have not seen for years, but deep down I know more times than not I end up restless and discontented after my 'time-out'. That's not the person I want to become.
But there is another reason why I am leaving Facebook. Communication is a two-way street, a street I don't always travel very well, I'm afraid, as the introvert inside me is hesitant to *initiate* conversation with a majority of my friends, never quite confident enough to believe people will be glad to hear from me. (What an insult to my friends' integrity and kindness!) How much easier it is to hide behind the shadow of Facebook and view people's pages and believe one has connected with them. But someone's Facebook page is not who they really are. It only shows what a person chooses to reveal of themselves through their comments, photos, debates, etc. Of course, one might argue that is the same for all forms of communication, but these other forms are at least mutual interaction, i.e. letters/emails/faxes/phone calls sent from one person to the other. Facebook allows you to gain all this information without the other person knowing. I'm tired, I'm probably waffling, but I hope you can gather what I'm trying to say.
I am actually a very shy person at heart (some of my acquaintance may find that hard to believe, but it's true!), I am uncomfortable voluntarily sharing information about myself, and I'd hate to think people judge me by my Facebook page! That's partially why I started this blog, although I came awfully close to deleting it straight away! I want it to be a practical means whereby I can share what's happening in my life with people that are interested in more than the 2-minute-noodles version provided by Facebook.
Facebook is not a bad invention if used wisely. I just don't know that I can use it wisely.
Now, to return to my friend I mentioned earlier, whom you have probably all forgotten about by now! This friend is... my violin. Ever since I succumbed to my illness (cytomegloid virus, if anyone is interested) I have entirely abandoned my violin, although we were drifting apart much earlier than that. But a friend at uni has asked me to play a piece for her organ exam at the end of the year, and so, on a whim, I decided to take out my violin and see what I have been missing these past few months. With my focus on piano these past few years, my tone and technique have deteriorated, but it felt *so* good to rediscover what used to be a treasure. Suddenly I was 7 years old again, in my violin teacher's home with his painting of Beethoven looking down on me and his cookie jar filled with sweets beckoning invitingly in the corner. Happy memories...
This really has been a rambling post, hasn't it. I'm sorry. But I guess I owed you one after these weeks of silence. Hopefully once I've deactivated my Facebook account I shall find more time to post on here... Here's hoping! Thanks for reading, whoever you are. :-)