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So I was thinking about performances. Like, the way I'm self-conscious if I think of my audience on lj, so I can only really write normally (whatever that means) if I pretend no one's listening, and how that influences what I say.... And the whole idea that one can't be fully oneself with other people because one is -always- performing for some sort of audience.... And online personas, right-- how people say they're not like that at all off-line, and how sometimes it could seem that one's online self is diametrically different.

It's horribly inhibiting, to me, actually imagining people's responses -while- I say something, but I think for more extraverted people, that's just normal. They always think of others, and are inhibited as a consequence-- so they might have a desperate need to let go, but it's assumed one can't do that in 'polite society' or whatever. Because to be uninhibited is on some level equivalent to being thoughtless (and rude, vulgar, offensive, etc). Except the internet isn't necessarily 'polite society', depending on whom you ask and where. There's a lot of disagreement on that, isn't there. Regardless, the urge to say what they want to hear or not say anything at all, if I care about their opinion, is almost overwhelming to me. If I don't care about their opinion (meaning, if I don't know them enough to care) then it feels as if I'm being spied upon by some indefinite number of faceless strangers who could be thinking -anything-, and the unknown is a scary concept all by itself unless one blocks it out with the comforting illusion of, for instance, this lj being 'my' space.

I mean, it's really not my space, is it. It's public space, theoretically, since it's publically accessible most of the time, but even so I don't -think- of it as such, which definitely affects how I act. Right now, I am writing only for my benefit. I realize I could get comments, but I usually don't imagine anyone will understand exactly what I mean, necessarily, which is probably why I so often fail to provide context. If I provided context, I'd be performing consciously (rather than unconsciously), which inhibits me to the point of silence.

This is a new concept to me, though I realize it's not actually all that new in general. I don't tend to think of being as an 'act' or an 'action'-- if anything, I resent being judged based on my actions and have always said that what I do isn't really who I am, because I very rarely do what I -really want- (that is, my choices are limited and my energies are focused inward). But being too, is an act. The question isn't really of the inability to judge one based on that act, but rather the presence of full knowledge and context, which is something else again.


Anyway, then I realized that any performance, if it's good, is real. I especially know this whenever I role play online-- that is, consciously combine performance and writing. It just seems to go naturally together, though perhaps that's because I was always inclined towards acting more than I could normally express. Regardless, is any textual 'act' really impactful or believable if it's false? That is, here we'd have the difference between 'not true' and 'not real'. Something can be true without actually being factual-- an performance of any kind, the play for the audience, seems to tap into that.

I had a weird experience co-writing disfigured!Draco last night with several people. To have written Harry's disgust and loathing and obsession felt cathartic for me-- and to read others who picked up on the same thread (while using my precise context) was also exhilarating. But then the thread twisted and the context changed (that is, the story took another turn away from my own exact emotional spot), and I felt alone again, my story once again only mine, but my performance (as part of a group) now public domain. So these two things-- story, performance-- aren't really the same but are connected whenever one -tells- a story or even writes as oneself, because one's self is never really the exact same self twice.

So I may not be myself, may be acting, but if I mean it (that is, feel it) then it's real (really me)...? That's my suspicion, at least.

I wouldn't want to connect a writer's performance with their 'actual' self in a factual, logical sense-- that way lies dementia. But if one believes there is truth beyond facts or rationality, then the constant shifts of an online persona don't have to contradict each other. If you think I'm one way and I think I'm 'really' another way-- those stances can both be valid. Whatever you think I'm doing with this post, you are correct, in other words. It's kind of a scary proposition-- letting go control like that-- but in the end, that means I can retain control of my own space, as well, since my own perception remains pure, overlapping only if I choose to see it that way. I don't know if any of that made sense, btw.

Date: 2004-10-19 09:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] yourpoison.livejournal.com
...If you're crazy, you're asking the wrong person, 'cause clearly (...to me), I'm crazy the same way you are~:)) I totally talk to people in my head all the time (....) and yeah, either I'm pontificating freely or arguing (and let me tell you, sometimes I get mighty pissed at my make-believe versions of people... er). So yeah, I mean, when I write posts, I'm arguing/talking with phantoms, usually-- I mean, this post wasn't really argumentative per se, so it was just a vague explaining-myself-to-the-universe thing, but my last post was definitely directed at Everybody Who Writes Fic Like That, and That Particular Author Whom Shall Not Be Named. I mean... I was trying to show to that author that they, you know, suck, to my satisfaction~:)) And everything is much clearer in writing, isn't it?

I don't usually argue with specific people (that I can name) in my head, but I have vague ideas of... 'people' who're there to be my audience. Er. Imaginary friends, y'know. Yeah ^^;;;;;

It's just different, to me, knowing those people are -actually reading-, y'know? Like... I'm much braver with them in my head, 'cause really, WHAT ARE THEY GOING TO DO, y'know. NOTHING, THAT'S WHAT. heh. Whereas in reality-land, if they find me offensive, I'd get upset. Though really, sometimes my inner version of someone finds me offensive too, but then I just take it in stride. Though I've been known to get upset back. But let's not go there :D :D :D

I don't generally want to know about people's 'real' lives-- I want to know what they think & how they feel. That may or may not have to do with what they do every day-- and if it does, usually they tell me so. I'm totally with you on the living in my head dept, and having to push myself to be present-- especially if I don't find the present... er, pleasant or interesting. I'm pretty present at a concert or by the sea, y'know? But yeah, being on a bus gets tedious. Life in general is tedious. I admire the 'life is art' people too, but it's that basic Kiersey-scale thing-- intuition vs. senses. I'm all about the intuition/inward-focus, man. So yeah, I wouldn't have anything to say about my life, either, and not because I'm insecure or anything.

There are different kinds of audiences, then?

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