The high school notebook: social media casualty?
by that damn redhead on January 8, 2009
in Miscellaneous, Social Media
I’ve got a milestone birthday coming up in the not-so-distant future, and as everybody gets older, they start to reflect on the past a little more. I tend to focus not necessarily on my past, per se, but on how our technology and culture has changed in my lifetime. (I guess you could say that’s my inner anthropologist.) In the past couple years I have come to some startling realizations, including the fact that today’s teenagers don’t know what life is like without the internet.
That alone blows my mind, but at the same time, I have a hard time thinking that I could live without it, either. Yet, I remember the 1990s and the excitement I had when I got my first bag phone, and I remember when my 16-bit Sega Genesis was the most advanced video game system money could buy. I spent hours upon hours trying to beat Sonic the Hedgehog until the day I finally did, then started all over again. The predecessors of social media are hardly anything to shout about now, but remember when that stuff was cutting edge?
Today, thanks largely in part to the internet, our technologies and ideas are advancing so quickly that some are quick to dismiss yesterday’s social media before the rest of the world (believe it or not) catches onto them. I do consider myself an early adopter, but I also have a hard time letting go of the comforts of the past. Which brings me back to my teenage years in the ’90s, and I’m wondering if my main writing outlet* back in those days, is, in fact, a true thing of the past — the notebook.
In every decade prior to the internet, prior to blogs, prior to “online journaling” in the late ’90s, prior to the term “emo” being commonplace, every introspective, the-entire-world-doesn’t-understand-me, angry teenager (usually wearing black) had one. At any given time they would be seen scribbling their deepest thoughts, dreams, desires, and bad, teenage poems in their notebook, whose plain-colored cover was speckled in lyrics by their favorite musicians (“you made me throw it all away/my morals left to decay…“), doodles, stickers of their favorite bands’ logos, and other miscellany. Coffee-stained, tear-stained pages between tattered covers, these sacred teenage manifestos were carried to school, to coffee shops, to the library — literally everywhere — until the very last blank page had been filled with ink.
These were our blogs.
Only, the difference between our teenage notebooks and today’s blogs is that if somebody read our notebook, it was a devastating, embarrassing invasion of privacy that would seem like the end of the world, only to be chronicled in our next notebook in exaggerated detail of how that traumatic experience changed our already-skeptical outlook on humanity to an even more jaded, cynical state. There was an unspoken code between teens who wrote in notebooks that you do not read somebody else’s notebook unless they chose to share something in it with you, at which occasion said two (or three) teens were then on a much deeper level of friendship.
I don’t think this happens anymore.
Granted, my window to the world of the American teenager is limited to my quiet, 14 year-old nephew and a 17 year-old blond girl who plants and sells pumpkins for college money, a former espresso-slinging coworker and “friend” of mine on MySpace, a platform I rarely use anymore. But she is very into MySpace, and admitted to me she rarely reads, so I doubt she has a notebook like I and many of my peers did.
Our culture has shifted to one where teenagers want to share everything online (sometimes too much), whose lives are willingly open books, and sometimes regrettedly so. Pew Internet & American Life Project reports that “93% of teens are online, and 64% of online teens ages 12-17 have participated in one or more among a wide range of content-creating activities on the internet, up from 57% of online teens in a similar survey at the end of 2004.” (Pew Internet & American Life Project: Teens & Social Media, 2007)
The same report also reveals that about two-thirds (66%) of all teens with an online profile restrict access “in some way” with girls being more protective of their posted images overall than boys, and most teens being protective of their personal information by purposely using false information and/or not revealing last names. While this is reassuring from a privacy/safety standpoint, and the entire report is fascinating, they focus on numbers when talking about the content created, not the actual quality or subject matter of said content, which is not something easily measured.
My point is that because teens are so willing to share their created content with the world, it’s more “Hey, look at me!” and less “If anybody reads this I’ll DIE.” With the birth and the propagation of the internet came a dramatic shift in our culture and the way we communicate which is to be celebrated, but at the same time also came the death of a longstanding medium of American adolescence–the notebook–and thus, a part of our teenage culture’s past.
Am I wrong? Is the teen-angst notebook still alive and well, or is it truly extinct? Did you have one? Do you know any teenagers who still carry out this custom?
*I also wrote for the teen section of The Flint Journal, but I wouldn’t consider that a “main writing outlet,” as only a handful of high schoolers in the county did that.
**Photo by austins_irish_pirate
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WOW. First of all, this was a REALLY GREAT posting.
You know what’s weird? Maybe the whole “Mean Girls Notebook” missed me by a decade (because, as we’ve established tonight, you’re YOUNG. I’m OLD). We never had these. I remember having a “diary” that I sometimes wrote in, but nothing like you’re describing (or what was in “Mean Girls”).
Anyway…
I think the “enough about me, what do you think about me?” attitude comes from the shift in raising totally self-serving teens now. We’ve given them no responsibilities except to focus on themselves (and then let everyone else know how great they are). Teens, by genetic design, are self-centered. But I really don’t remember it being this bad (you know, when I used to walk to school, up hill, both ways, in the snow…)
Of course, I just memed 7 weird things about myself, so who am I to talk?!?! I miss Sonic *sob*
WritRams’s last blog post..Like You Really Needed a Meme to Know I’m Weird (But OK)
Honestly? I’ve never seen Mean Girls. I’m not much of a movie person, but I guess that’s one I should put on my list, huh?
LOL! Don’t expect classic viewing. It’s mindless entertainment that all of us who were once teenage girls will completely understand (plus, I have 2 stepdaughters and they required me to take them to that movie when it came out a few years ago LOL).
WritRams’s last blog post..Like You Really Needed a Meme to Know I’m Weird (But OK)
Hi Stacy,
I think you are right about the blogs but I don’t really read teenage blogs. I do think that mobile phones killed the NOTE taking. I don’t know if teenagers these days write and pass notes anymore. They have cell phones and can text to people. The only thing about that is that in a quiet room you can hear the texting. But for the most part, texting killed the passing of notes.
As you can say, “Social Media killed the diary,” which I do believe is partly true. On Myspace you can type a journal entry that can be locked down and NOT everyone has a formal blog. So when you use the blog function which does have a smaller audience you can control just how much information you let people see. Which I think is a great function and the ONLY useful thing other then promotion of music on Myspace.
I totally agree with you though. My how times have changed.
Jamie’s last blog post..Networking and creating your own game!
I’m Gen-x – whatever that means – and I remember being introduced to the internet in college. I have memories that the first site I visited was something called Yahoo followed by MTV’s website.
Back then the thought of spilling my intimate secrets online was foreign. Lets move this to High School – it was non existent.
I have a second cousin, who has an I-phone. Why she needs one, I have no idea, but she says its because she needs to be connected. Connected to what – you’re 17? Her facebook page is rated PG and is full of “hey look what I did” comments, pics and posts.
All this seems ridiculous – until I started thinking, and what you said encapsulates it. Back when the notebook was hush hush – I think we as kids still wanted and desired an outlet. We secretly wished for our voices and hidden things to be heard and seen.
The psychology is the same today – just the “tools” are different.
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Twitter Comment
Reading: Interesting post on how teenagers’ behaviour of outpouring has changed because of social media. [link to post] @damnredhead
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I was once told I was an eternal 15 year old. Maybe that is why I have scrawled my inner most thoughts in notebooks most of my life. I have many I dearly love. However, recently I have moved many of these thoughts into online spaces and I do probably share too much. But is that the eternal teenage nature in me playing up? That said, I still have my notebooks for when I want to record those thoughts that usually end up with a little bit of a tear stain on the page. As those must always remain private for me. Nice post.
I’m so there with you, Nicola. Since writing this post I’ve relocated and I found a lot of my old notebooks in a box under my bed. Sometimes I flip through them and see I’ve mentioned an old friend’s name, so I’ll look them up on Facebook. Other times, it’s just too painful to read.
Thanks for stopping by.