OMG. OMG. OMFG.

Go F*cking Blog About It

The internet has improved our lives by bringing information to the public. Even once-sacred mysteries are readily accessible via the Online Catholic Encyclopedia. Few today are safe from search engines, though some are considerably more Googleicious than others.

(Your Googleicious rank is based on how much dirt about you is available online. For example: Chris Brogan, who has 317,000 available pieces about him, including several videos, isn’t as Googleicious as, say, Emily Gould, whose 60,400 results come jam-packed with all kinds of confessionals and exposes from ex-lovers and colleagues.)

Googling is now part of the dating process. It’s like running a background check from the comfort of your own home.

Except unlike a background check (or a simple search on CriminalSearches.com), the whole wide web is often much more thorough, revealing even the most embarrassing details, as provided by friends, colleagues, exes, enemies and the person in question themselves.

Case in point: a couple of years ago my sister and I were using YouTube to look for a commercial I’d been in for Coca-Cola Asia when we inadvertently landed on a video of my ex-boyfriend singing and dancing at some corporate benefit. He and I had had a horrible, drama-fueled break-up complete with a bull run and front page scoop but had since made up and become good friends.

Of course, even my esteem for him could not keep my tongue in check when I lay eyes on him dancing like a chipmunk caught on an electric fence.

“Oh dear god, I can’t believe I fucked him!”

I wondered whether he knew that he was online, at the reach of anyone with internet access. Then, almost reflexively, ran a search for myself. The number of items that came up were limited, but my Googleicious score was pretty high thanks to my blog.

I grew up on an island in the Pacific. A girl can only do so much reading, jet skiing, scuba diving, lounging and partying. By the age of thirteen, I had built myself a world online, a world I naively imagined no one in my daily life would find. Sexcapades, god-awful poetry, rants, obsessive odes of desperate want, tales of crashing comedowns—all of it was at the world’s fingertips via Google.

Richard and I had just started dating at the time. I mentioned it to him because I didn’t want it to be an issue later. What I didn’t know was that Richard had already read everything. Possessed, he’d Googled all night long and retraced my life without my knowledge.

“I got more than I bargained for.”

“Why didn’t you tell me?” I asked, mortified.

“I felt wrong. You’ve been doing this online thing for so long, who am I to tell you I feel at odds about it? How could someone so new to your life demand that you stop doing something you enjoy?”

“You wanted me to stop blogging?”

“I would never ask you to do that. This is who you are.”

I wanted to tell him that no, I wasn’t my blog, that blogging was a byproduct of living, like a foot print I can’t help making as I walk. I didn’t—there was no point in confusing him with my self-indulgent rant. He had the main thing down clearly: that he should never ask me to quit blogging.

Then I started writing about him.

T.M.I.

My friend Katerina recently ended things with her boyfriend after a drawn-out battle about her musings on the internet.

Nathan didn’t mind that Katerina wrote until his ex-girlfriend and baby momma started stalking her on the internet. Now, Nathan’s ex knows everything about his new life with Katerina: the good, the bad and the downright mortifying.

“Why do you have to give her ammunition?” he demanded of Katerina when they last spoke. “If you could just stop, she would be out of our lives!”

“He’s wrong,” Katerina told me later. “His ex will stop at nothing. If she can’t stalk me on the internet, she’ll stalk me in the physical world. It’s who she is. I’m tired of having the same conversation over and over with Nathan about how I should feel ashamed for posting such personal stuff out on the Internet for the world to see. It’s like it’s my writing that’s the problem here. It’s not. Nathan enables that woman to continue with this craziness, if it’s not my blog, it will be something else.”

My husband gets where Nathan is coming from.

“Well, first of all, he needs to grow some balls,” Richard says, leaning against the kitchen counter and taking a sip of his Coke. “Next time he talks to his ex, he needs to tell her, ‘I don’t want to hear what you’re reading, I don’t want to hear what you’re thinking, all I need out of your pretty little mouth is what time I need to pick up my child.’ Aside from that, though, I have to agree with the guy. I mean, there’s a line. No one wants their personal details all over the place. No one wants to walk into a room and know people are thinking, ‘O-M-G, that’s the boyfriend, he can’t keep it hard,’ or ‘he makes her cum fucking her in the ass.’”

“So you draw the line at sex.” I conclude, looking at him.

“Not necessarily.”

“Where do you draw the line?”

“At too much information.”

“How much is too much?” I ask and then, I invoke Emily Gould. “Shouldn’t he have known this would happen? Shouldn’t he have known that she, a writer, would write about him?”

BLOG VS. PRINT MEDIA

“At some point I’d grown accustomed to the idea that there was a public space where I would always be allowed to write, without supervision, about how I felt,” wrote Emily Gould in her New York Times Magazine debut earlier this year. “Even having to take into account someone else’s feelings about being written about felt like being stifled in some essential way.”

Gould described how she and her ex-boyfriend Henry fought about the things she was writing about him in her blog.

“I kept coming back to the idea that I had a right to say whatever I wanted. I don’t think I understood then that I could be right about being free to express myself but wrong about my right to make that self-expression public in a permanent way. I described my feelings in the language of empowerment: I was being creative and Henry wanted to shut me up. His point of view was just as extreme: I wasn’t generously sharing my thoughts; I was compulsively seeking gratification from strangers at the expense of the feelings of someone I actually knew and loved. I told him that writing, especially writing about myself and my surroundings was part of my personality, and that if he wanted to remain in my life, he would need to reconcile himself with being part of the world I described.”

Henry eventually left her life. The guy after him, Joshua David Stein crucified her for blogging about their relationship in a piece for Page Six.

My husband thinks writing for “legitimate publications” is somehow different than blogging.

Former relationship columnist Matt Katz doesn’t agree. Beyond the fact that a blog has no restrictions on form and word count, a column and a blog are essentially the same thing: a writer, exposed.

I ask him whether his soon-to-be wife ever minded being written about.

“Nope,” he replies. “But she read beforehand.”

Smart man. Now that old media is merging with new media, it doesn’t really matter what kind of writing is going on. Essay, poem, column, song lyrics—if it’s in print, chances are that it will be online, making someone’s Googleicious score soar.

FODDER

My husband’s attitude toward my blog changed when my posts changed from the praises of a fawning girlfriend in the throes of passion to the musings of a woman trying to make a relationship work with a man who didn’t have a lot of time, whose family largely hated her, and whose desires in the bedroom were different than hers.

Few mind being praised, but no one likes being cast in a critical light. Suddenly, the blog took center stage in our fights.

“Going to your blog for him must be like walking into a party where everyone is talking about him,” my mother reflected one night during the worst of the fights. “Only instead of quickly shushing themselves, they keep right on talking as though he’s not there at all.”

It’s true—it wasn’t just me who was talking about him in the void of the web. I was engaging a roomful of people about our life and they were waging in with everything from helpful advice to, “BTW, AV, you left your bra at my place last night!”

Richard never asked me to stop, but he referenced the blog enough to let me know he was displeased.

“You know what?” he screamed at me once. “Forget it. Just go fucking blog this!”

And I did.

PASSWORD-PROTECTED

“I offered to make the posts that mentioned Josh inaccessible by password-protecting them,” Gould wrote, recounting the last conversation she had with her ex, before he detailed their affair at Page Six.

Stein’s response? “You should be password-protected.”

Of course, according to Stein’s piece, the fateful talk outside Gawker headquarters went a little differently. He told her his privacy was his, not hers, and she smiled and responded, “You should have known better. After all, I’m a blogger.”

THE WRITING ON THE WALL

How do you sleep with a writer?

“Carefully,” writes fantasy author Catherynne Valente.

First of all, you must be prepared to see yourself dressed up in her clothes. In drag, in costume, in spangly eyeliner and a fedora hat.

You have to steel yourself, and accept the following with equanimity: She is going to write about you.

It takes a strong person to bear this: you’ll see your private jokes, your secrets, your childhood, the angle of your penis, the heft of your breasts, your personal griefs, your complaints, your house and your profession ground up and mulched, composted and laid out bare, for anyone to see, in her books. Her books are naked, and she will make you match her. It will not be comfortable. She’ll use everything you are—but she’s fair, she uses everything she is, too.

Every time you touch her, she will store that touch away, to be accessed later, spooled out, smoothed over, given to characters she hasn’t even thought of yet. Every time you fight, she will mentally catalogue your turns of phrase. If that seems inhuman, well, she can be like that. Computers are not so ruthless about retaining information.

Whether a novelist, columnist, poet, essayist or blogger, if you hang with a writer, you will eventually become fodder. But are Gould and Valente right? Is it fair to say that anyone who goes to bed with a writer should be prepared to see themselves exposed?

“At some point or another,” Katz says. “Even if it’s two years down the line.”

“Has anyone written really personal stuff about you?” I ask him.

“I can’t think of anyone who wrote too much.”

I’ve been written about. I think now about the first time it happened, on a bathroom stall in high school (yeah, I’m old. Back then we didn’t have JuicyCampus or GossipReport). I remember I walked into the cafeteria and the entire room went silent. With all eyes on me, I cocked an eyebrow and gave a little wave of my hand as if to say, “shoo,” and sat down at my little group’s corner table, hell-bent on not allowing my face to betray the insane beating of my heart. Over the course of that lunch, at least 20 people came over to tell me what they’d seen on the bathroom wall.

I refused to go look at it because I wanted to actively deny the person who’d done it the pleasure of a reaction. But I forgot about it and, later that week, found myself looking up at the words. I can’t remember now whether it said I was a “Perusian” slut or a bitch or both, but I will never forget the other things people had written around it, things like, “You spelled her name wrong,” “UR jealous cause your boyfriend thinks she’s hotter than U,” “Is Perusian someone of Persian-Russian ancestry?” and “She’s the antichrist.”

It wasn’t pleasant, but it was kind of funny, too. And flattering, in a weird way.

It wasn’t funny or flattering when an ex-fiance launched a blog about all the reasons I would make the worst wife, including the fact that I can’t have children, which at that time wasn’t something that I readily admitted. But it wasn’t the end of the world, either.

But maybe I’m not being fair. Maybe it’s different for people who blog and who expose themselves on a regular basis than it is for someone whose online presence is minimal.

FRONT ROW

It’s hard to draw the line. When you love someone, especially someone creative whose self expression is found in words, you don’t want to be the asshole who sets limits.

At some point, my husband stopped reading.

I have to admit that when he first told me he didn’t read my blog, I was a little hurt. In a way, it felt like he was rejecting a part of me (so much for “I’m not my blog,” huh?). But now I can appreciate the space he’s let me have within our relationship for me to explore what I think and what I feel—even when it’s about him and not always entirely positive. He views my blog now the same way he does my nights out with girlfriends: a sort of necessary thing he has no business being a part of, though he figures largely in the conversation.

“If there is anything you need to tell me, I know you’ll have no problem telling me,” he said. “I don’t need to read your blog because I have a front row seat to your life. I get parts of you no one else will ever see.”

He does.

Still, every once in a while, especially when we’re apart for longer than usual, I’ll spot him on my site and laugh because he always skips to the entries with pictures.

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18 Responses to “Go F*cking Blog About It”

  1. Atherton Bartelby



    I agree with you: it’s hard to draw the line. It’s hard to accurately define where the line is (or should be) drawn. Even altering scenes or narratives or dialogues in our blog entries about our significant others, or employing pseudonyms, does little to change the fact that we are sharing information about our others that they may not want shared, or at the very least may feel uncomfortable that we are sharing it in so public a forum.

    For the most part, I have been lucky in my experiences writing about my romantic interests. They have either not cared, or have enjoyed my positive characterizations of them in my blog, and discontinued reading once those characterizations became negative. I have had my share of “Uh-oh, probably shouldn’t have written that” moments, particularly with those who claimed to never read what I wrote about them, and then suddenly stopping by to explore and stumbling across precisely the wrong entry.

    But I tend not to worry about that anymore, though. Well, I do worry. Let’s say I try not to care. I feel that as long as I have notified them in advance that I maintain a blog, and that it is part of my life as a creative and as a writer, part of my expression, part of my catharthis and therapy, then, well, I feel justified in smiling and saying, “You should have known better. After all, I’m a blogger.”

    I would rather that than, as Gould also described in her article, “[Henry] insisted that I take down the offending post and watched as I sat at my desk in our bedroom, slowly, grudgingly making the keystrokes necessary to delete what I’d written. As I sat there staring into the screen at the reflection of Henry standing behind me, I burst into tears.” Because to me that is “drawing a line” tantamount to creative and emotional censorship, and what writer or blogger wants to endure that?

    I suppose in the end all we writers and bloggers can hope for is to find significant others whose ideas of where that line should be drawn most closely mirror our own.

    (Can you tell I’ve been thinking about this all summer long?)

    OMG, Atherton Bartelbys last blog post: The Blogosphere’s Next Hot Bloggers

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  2. Beck



    I loved this. It’s got me reeling. I never write about my husband and I wonder if I am cutting out this enormous part of my life because I want to respect his privacy. I live with him and he is so much a part of my every moment practically that the other things I write about are the internalized things or of past people. I am like that with friends and family too. I think I will have to change that though… it would be nice to record my observations with them, my experiences and voice my grievances from time to time! I read the links articles… interesting stuff.

    OMG, Becks last blog post: When stranger meets strange

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  3. Jenny, Bloggess



    Brilliant.

    My husband likes my blog…unless it’s about him. But he knew what he was in for when he got involved with me.

    Kind of.

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  4. Jenny, Bloggess



    Featured on Good Mom/Bad Mom on the Houston Chronicle online: http://tinyurl.com/6hwlhy

    OMG, Jenny, Bloggesss last blog post: This is the third post I’ve written today and I want a medal (alternate title – How to deal with trolls)

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  5. rhea



    My kids and hubby don’t want to be on the blog…unless they ok it. When did my life become so…so… censored, damnit!

    Loved this post. Great writing.

    OMG, rheas last blog post: Animal Jokes & Annie

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    AV Flox Reply:

    How does the process work? You write a blog post and read it out loud to make sure no one has objections?

    I kind of do this, too. Not just with my husband, but with friends. Especially on the blog posts that deal–however anonymously–with naughty things they’ve done!

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  6. always home and uncool



    My Love is usually cool with all I post, though she recently banned me from blogging about her going on a detox diet. Didn’t say I couldn’t mention it on someone’s comment page, though.

    OMG, always home and uncools last blog post: Singalong with Sarah Palin!

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    AV Flox Reply:

    Oh, I wonder why she doesn’t want you talking about her detox? I would read about that! My husband and I have been looking at different ones but haven’t yet come across one we both agree is the best.

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  7. New Age Bitch



    I’m now in my 3rd blogcarnation, and this one is in a sort of holding pattern. I don’t write the personal stuff in it, at least not yet. But I also write two literary columns chock-full of the personal stuff. I’ve become segmented, but at least the squares are filled or mostly so.

    I’ve been gingerly exploring this drive so many of us share to write the most intimate details of our lives in this semi-anonymous/semi-public manner. It has to be an extension of the social isolation that exists in our culture, coupled with an overall need to forge an identity through expression….and that’s as far as I got.

    I’ve never held back in blogging but I’ve also completely closed down blogs when being stalked by angry ex’s. A correlation there? Perhaps, but the compulsion to express who I am and to express my life as I see it is awfully strong.

    This was a wonderful exploration of the topic. Found you through Jenny The Bloggess.

    Oh. Ironically, the person in my life now would ADORE being blogged about in all ways: the good, the bad, the everything. But I just haven’t felt like it. What’s up with that?

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    AV Flox Reply:

    Do you really think the need to overshare has its roots in social isolation? Why is it that as social networking sites bring more and more of us together, we’re still exposing ourselves online?

    I love this stuff. I could think about it forever. When you develop your thoughts further on the drive to overshare, I hope you’ll drop by and leave a comment so I can run over and read.

    I like your blog–where are your columns?

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  8. Andria



    Great post.

    I used to tell all, until my husband left me because I talked smack about his sister. It was the truth- she had been dreadful. I learned my lesson, and had to go elsewhere when I wanted to spill the dirt on her latest hurtful comments.

    http://andria-and-co.com

    OMG, Andrias last blog post: The Business of Blogging

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  9. sarah louise



    I think about this topic a lot. Even at a pseudonymous blog, my cousin will inevitably show pictures of her pottery to my mom and my mom will remember that I’m Sarah Louise and say, “oh, I’m on your blog right now, reading about Shadow Voices.” I am a huge SATC fan and always wish that part of the special features were the columns Carrie wrote (and yes, I’m aware Candace Bushnell wrote that book.)

    How is it that by the time you get to be comment 11 you feel like you have nothing to write on the bathroom wall? Great post has already been said, but I’ll say it again. Great post.

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  10. manager mom



    great post. I am still working out where I stand on the TMI issue. I think I have come to the point where if it’s something that I’m afraid to announce at a dinner party, I won’t put it on my blog.

    Of course I am not a *reserved* person, so I’ve talked about everything from my kids to my colon at most dinner parties.

    OMG, manager moms last blog post: I Will Run You Down Like The Vermin You Are

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  11. Nikki



    Mm… I don’t know, I think the line has been crossed. I blogged about my ex, while we were together and during the breakup and afterward. I got stalked by the girls he was cheating on me with. And when I looked back at those posts, after moving on, I felt like I sounded whiny and pathetic. I’m stronger than that person I portrayed online. There’s more to my life than my relationship.

    So I relocated urls a couple times, have been in a happy, healthy, wonderful relationship for the past year and I never, ever, ever blog about him. Well, that’s not true. I post an occasional picture, or mention things that we’ve done or sing the occasional praise. But I never mention him by his real name – in fact, I don’t even use my real name – and I keep our personal shit offline. If we fight, it’s between he & I only. It’s about having respect for your relationship. I’m long past needing attention and validation from strangers – because that’s what it really is. And as I said, there is so much more to me and my life than kvetching about a man.

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  12. kevin



    For the present generation , internet is included alongwith the three basic needs of life i.e. food, clothing, shelter. It acts like lifeline to communicate with the whole world.

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  13. sandrar



    Hi! I was surfing and found your blog post… nice! I love your blog. :) Cheers! Sandra. R.

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  14. Neil Cashman



    I’ll tell you, can you believe that the internet has been around for only 10 years! It has completely changed the world and how we do things!

    But the interesting thing is the whole web2.0 and sometimes people get too much info out there!

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  15. Moonbadger



    I think retaining a degree of anonymity is essential for anyone who works or posts regularly within blogging communities. The amount of information that can now be gleaned by search engines, spiders, spammers and general google searches is quite phenomenal nowadays. It’s something that anyone who works in the IT industry needs to be reminded, beware what you put on the tinterweb…
    Moonbadger´s last blog ..Pamplona – Where the bulls run free… My ComLuv Profile

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  • AV Flox writes about web culture; new media’s gradual overthrow of old media; trends in social media; and the complicated entanglements people get themselves into as we venture forth into this new world where, more and more, the analog is colliding with the digital.

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