A lot of Mastodon advice I’m seeing seems to be geared toward “How to replicate your Twitter experience” or “Can Mastodon replicate your Twitter experience?”

But… I don’t WANT to replicate my Twitter experience. 1/more

My Twitter experience was kinda bad for me! It was good for a long time, but it was also bad. I’m not talking about the takeover by Captain 420, or people tweeting mean things at me. I mean the constantly feeling like a exposed nerve. The “let me show you this awesome new thing to be mad about!”

I love, for instance, that Mastodon doesn’t have the equivalent of a QT. There are plenty other platforms to do the “Hey, look at this asshole here” thing. The, “Does this smell bad to you?” thing. /2

And I’m happy with having fewer followers. No offense to my Twitter followers! But if you were around long enough and built enough numbers, you had a lot of followers who really shouldn’t be following you. People who followed you for, like, one snarky tweet you wrote in 2015, and then you spent the next seven years disappointing them by doing something else. /3

I get that people might miss Twitter’s influence. But that obviously had costs too. One of those was convincing so many people that they were every day engaged in a giant tug of war over The Discourse, and that every tweet of theirs—and everyone in their feed—should be aimed at moving that rope three millimeters in the correct direction.

I don’t deny social media’s power to make change. But I’m one culture critic spouting opinions. I am not organizing the friggin Arab Spring over here. /4

Anyway, I don’t know if I’m going to use this site much. I’m trying to unplug more generally. (Also: I’m still on Twitter, just using it less.) Maybe this is just methadone for Twitter. Methadon.

But I would love this to be a smaller, more positive, less brain-poisoning experience. And that may not be possible! Maybe many of the problems I had with Twitter were in fact Me Problems, and I packed them in my luggage with me. Let’s find out! /end

@poniewozik totally get this. For the first few hours, I found myself trying to seek out my TL on mastodon - but then stopped. Why would I want to recreate the exact same experience? Now moving slowly, trying to feel out where/what I want out here.
@bedbathbegone Yeah, I think about when I started with Twitter in 2009. I spent a couple months just lurking the timelines of people I knew before I even started an account. I'm sure it took months to really fill out my follow list. I don't want some instant replacement that just self-inflates out of the box like a Casper Mattress.
@poniewozik I feel the exact same way, it’s actually quite frightening how much my mental health have improved since I moved away from Twitter. I’m liking this smaller space so much more!

@poniewozik

I'm just stumbling across this thread now, but I agree

For me, the thing I like is that it has far less of the massive-group-flocking-attention thing you see on Twitter

I'd rather just have conversations with interesting randos, to whom I am a hopefully interesting rando

I don't feel the slightest need to know what microzeitgeist is being hallucinated into existence by the sudden joint attention of 100 million people

@poniewozik @clive Twitter felt like a treadmill to me, but I didn’t realize it until I left.
@clive Yes, that exactly. And I just think it's better for me to spend more of the day without the ambient presence of the entire world in my head!

@poniewozik

(I am being a bit hyperbolic here I realize ...

It's not that I don't have "the slightest interest" -- I'm as intrigued as the next person by what big joint-attention public conversations are going on ...

It's just that Twitter's design led to a constant *waterfall* of 'em ... too much to find pleasant in any way)

@poniewozik The methadone for Twitter really resonates for me. Plus if more people wean themselves off Twitter, even partly, that creates more competition among platforms and reduces revenue for Twitter under Elon. This has been my approach for Facebook, which also, I believe, provides valuable space for certain communities though at the same time I don’t want to support it heartily.