Facebook recently told me that I needed to convert my personal account into a “content creator” account. Why? I have no idea.
As a minor show of rebellion, I changed my work title on there to “discontent creator.” Because I refuse to define my work as “content.”
I hate that word.
To the current culture, a novel is content. A film or documentary is content. A poem is content. A painting is content. A thoughtful essay is content. A comedy sketch is content. A cat falling off a table is content as long as a camera is running.
The word treats all of those things as interchangeable cogs in a system whose purpose is to capture attention long enough for someone to show ads. I don’t object to someone making money, but I do object to a soulless system which offers no real value for the attention it steals.
I don’t want to create content.
I want to write.
I want to make films.
I want to create images.
I want to communicate ideas and feelings.
I want to create connections with others.
Those distinctions matter.
Some people vaguely object to social media “content” because it’s poor quality slop, but that’s far too simplistic.

Social media creates shallow ties at expense of deeper connections
Life has a brutal habit of forcing us to confront our own hypocrisy
When the state turns you into a criminal, friends become enemies
Each experience of beauty and love stands alone, different from the rest
Trivial objects have power to be containers for strong emotions
If authentic connection is absent, we crave love and a human touch
My own question now faced me: ‘Would a healthy person do that?’
That huge fed debt increase? They’ve already used 60 percent of it