đ´ In my oasis delightful gardens shall grow | #44
23 June 2021 :: Desiring my way towards an online oasis of interconnected, welcoming gardens
Hello everyone!
I hope youâre all doing well. In this edition I talk about how a new metaphor is going to fundamentally change how I think about all my online âstuffâ. Iâd love to hear from you if this resonates with you!
I also link to a bunch of things Iâve made in the last week that might be of interest at the end.
đ´ In my oasis delightful gardens shall grow
It's astonishing how, when you find the right metaphor, what was once confusing and opaque suddenly becomes obvious and clear. This recently happened for me about *gestures vaguely* all this online stuff.
I was introduced to the idea of an online oasis by Rob Hardy, who I consider it my very good fortune to get to know over the last few months:
An oasis is a small patch of fertile ground in a desert. Itâs a refuge from a hostile world. A place where one can let their guard down. Where they can finally, if only for a brief time, be themselves. The internet is just such a desert. â Rob Hardy
The idea of cultivating an oasis on the Internet in which people can take refuge, explore and perhaps get a little lost appealed to me immediately. At first my idea was for Expanding Awareness, my new Alexander Technique blog, to be its own oasis. That was a step in the right direction, but something still didnât feel quite right.
But last night, while talking to Rob, it all came together:Â everything I publish is the oasis. All of it.
Going a level deeper, perhaps, actually, I am the oasis. That may sound a little self-aggrandising, but what I mean to point to is the perspective that everything I publish is building an interconnected little world of stories, ideas and adventures.
This has become increasingly clear as Iâve seen many people pop up across my different channels and engage with a broad range of topics I talk about, rather than sticking to specific ones. Theyâre wandering around and exploring my oasis.
The idea that itâs all one cohesive, continuous oasis is a powerful shift for me, but the metaphor is still slightly incomplete. It needs one small addition, which is that my oasis contains a number of interconnected gardens that I cultivate.
These gardens are unique. They have their own style and vibe, there are different types of trees. Some have water, some have projector screens and music, some have sculptures while some have mazes and playgrounds. Some have a fence around them, with keys to the gates available for purchase (a man has to eat).
There are paths that lead from garden to garden, some obvious and signposted, others hidden and surprising. Different people may choose to gather in different gardens, guided by their own desires. They may follow different paths.
And I shall tend to the gardens, creating spaces where people can take refuge from the desert of the Internet, planting new seeds and laying down paths of interconnection.
What does this mean in practice? It means a couple of things.
It means behaving as if âthe people in the oasisâ share that fact in common. While they may be in different gardens, they are still in the same oasis. No longer will I think of âYouTube subscribersâ, âThinking Out Loud subscribersâ and âTwitter followersâ as different groups. They are all already in the oasis, they just either havenât discovered the other gardens, or they have and those gardens simply do not interest them, and this is fine. This is a non-coercive oasis.
One simple step is bringing newsletter subscribers onto one master email list, segmented by garden, of course. At some point soon I will import Thinking Out Loud subscribers into ConvertKit. I have some hangups to work through here around âbecoming or being seen to be Internet Marketing Guyâ (I am not that), but those are not dealbreakers and I can navigate my way through them. I will still do all this my way.
And I will make all this clear so that people can opt out and leave whenever they want. My oasis is not the Hotel California;Â you can check out any time you like and you can always leave.
This shift also liberates me from worrying about the âscopeâ for each garden. No, itâs all one oasis. Where itâs right for there to be a path from one garden to another, I will create that path. I will make the boundaries blurry, encouraging people to leave gardens and explore the others.
Finally, I want to focus on delighting visitors to my oasis (another of Robâs ideas) at every opportunity. That feeling when youâre wandering along a hidden path and you discover that tiny, thoughtful sculpture that speaks directly to your heart. I want those experiences to be everywhere.
I think thatâs all on this for now. It may not sound like much from the outside, but from the inside it clarifies so much and gives me permission to keep playing. Iâm excited to see how this grows! Who knows, maybe one day, before too long, thereâll be gardens in the real world as well, and the digital and physical will blend together cohesively.
For the record, here are the current gardens as I see them:
Thinking Out Loud newsletter đ (to be migrated to ConvertKit)
Expanding Awareness, its newsletter (already in ConvertKit) and the associated Alexander Technique course and community forum
New things Iâve made
For reasons Iâll go into another time, Iâve been much more able to âaccessâ creativity in the last week, and here are some of the things Iâve made. I hope (and actually expect) that Iâll be able to maintain a decent level of creative output now.
YouTube Videos
Notebook posts
Being self-directed is its own work (similar content as video above)
Greasing the creative groove â like pull ups, but for creative work
Stopping the habitual suppression of creative ideas â current game I am playing with to allow more creativity
đ´ In my oasis delightful gardens shall grow (the article above đ)
Thatâs all for now! Until next time.
Michael
Wow, that was such a beautiful description with very vivid metaphors! Now I really hope that someday you'll a have an illustrated map of your oasis! (Ă la Greater Ribbonfarm Cultural Region)