Psycho-Babble Administration Thread 441543

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Re: Hey Dr. Bob » jujube

Posted by Dinah on January 24, 2005, at 17:53:01

In reply to Re: Hey Dr. Bob » Dinah, posted by jujube on January 24, 2005, at 16:33:51

I agree completely. And I find I've learned so much from that! It is inordinately rare that I don't learn to genuinely welcome the input and viewpoint of each poster.

 

Re: small town groups » Dinah

Posted by alexandra_k on January 24, 2005, at 18:04:10

In reply to Re: small town groups » alexandra_k, posted by Dinah on January 24, 2005, at 17:44:50

> Actually, I apologize for my vehemence.

No, you don't need to apologize.

>Dr. Bob is probably going to implement a policy that violates one of my core values and I'm repulsed by my lack of integrity and spine for not disassociating myself from Babble over it.

But if it violates one of your core values then doesn't it indicate more integrity and spine to talk about what your values are and why you have them? That way other people can understand where you are coming from and maybe even come to see things in a similar way.

If you dissociate yourself then we lose out. Being selfish here. I am sorry that you are hurting over this. But I think you are doing really well NOT to dissociate. It is just that maybe Dr B has a different ideology. Maybe we can understand things a bit from his point of view as well? Not that we have to agree at the end of the day...

> Dr. Bob is an unstoppable force.

Heh heh. Unless we all decide to split he may well be :-)

 

Re: P.S. » Dinah

Posted by alexandra_k on January 24, 2005, at 18:21:06

In reply to P.S. » alexandra_k, posted by Dinah on January 24, 2005, at 17:50:10

> Your school sounds fascinating. Would you like to discuss education on Social?

Sure, can do. Just ask a question or something to get the ball rolling.

Though I expect I shall have to bite my tongue rather severely if we get into teaching 'morality', religion, and the teaching or non teaching of sex ed / safe sexual practices.

> I really am not unaware of the irony of sending my son to a private school that shares my values of inclusion and tolerance.

Irony? Well you would hardly send him off to somewhere where you didn't agree with their values.

:) I'm Montessori to my fingers.

I have heard of that. We have their early childhood centers and after school care agencies all over. What is that about?

 

Redirect: education

Posted by Dr. Bob on January 24, 2005, at 19:47:04

In reply to Re: P.S. » Dinah, posted by alexandra_k on January 24, 2005, at 18:21:06

> > Your school sounds fascinating. Would you like to discuss education on Social?
>
> Sure, can do. Just ask a question or something to get the ball rolling.

That itself was "something"... Here's a link:

http://www.dr-bob.org/babble/social/20050123/msgs/447030.html

Thanks,

Bob

 

Re: Redirect: education » Dr. Bob

Posted by alexandra_k on January 24, 2005, at 20:07:16

In reply to Redirect: education, posted by Dr. Bob on January 24, 2005, at 19:47:04

Ya. Realised that AFTER I'd posted. Thanks for the redirect.

 

Re: small town groups » mair

Posted by henrietta on January 24, 2005, at 20:08:49

In reply to Re: small town groups » Dr. Bob, posted by mair on January 24, 2005, at 11:31:19

Mair:
Thank you for a well-reasoned, thoughtful, and brilliant post. I'm in awe.

 

Re: Hey Dr. Bob

Posted by Gabbix2 on January 24, 2005, at 20:18:37

In reply to Hey Dr. Bob, posted by Dinah on January 24, 2005, at 16:10:18

> How many small towns close their borders and don't let "outsiders" in? I know *I'd* not want to live in a small town that did.
>
> How about calling it what they are. Gated communities, not small towns. You're insulting small towns everywhere.


I think that's an important distinction, that euphemisim, small town boards, really offends me.
Most small towns have welcome signs posted as a greeting when you enter into them, not "You may not converse with the residents" I'm afraid these boards remind me more of the sign outside the "Old American" Biker bar in the city I used to live in:
NO non-whites
and NO funny haircuts

 

PB History

Posted by mair on January 24, 2005, at 21:33:20

In reply to Re: Hey Dr. Bob, posted by Gabbix2 on January 24, 2005, at 20:18:37

Maybe this will turn out like the 2001 Board. For the uninitiated, when Bob set up the 2000 Board, he also set up a 2001 Board for those who registered during that year. In the main, the 2001 registrants weren't in favor of separate Boards to begin with. The 2000 folks had wanted it for awhile. The 2000 Board has obviously served a purpose for a small group of people who got to know one another when this Board was infinitely smaller. The 2001 Board was never really used much and was deleted by Bob fairly early on.

Bob can't force anyone to join smaller boards. Maybe if the interest isn't there, the concept won't really go anywhere.

Mair

 

And another thing

Posted by mair on January 24, 2005, at 21:55:18

In reply to PB History, posted by mair on January 24, 2005, at 21:33:20

It might be helpful to hear from some members of the 2000 Board on this. I am of the impression, maybe entirely wrong, that many of the 2000 Board members simply don't use any of the Babble sites anywhere near as much as they used to, including the 2000 Board. There may be many reasons for this which are unrelated to the site, or at least unrelated to the 2000 Board.

While it's nice to take a break and come back again to some familiar names, I can also say that for me anyway, it's very hard to come back and get back into the rhythm of the Board. The longer you're away, the harder it is to feel comfortable returning. While Board participation yields obvious benefits for many of us, it's tough to sustain those benefits and connections unless you're actively here.

Is it possible that the more time one spends on a restricted Board, the less time they spend on an unrestricted Board AND at some point the restricted Board person might feel too disconnected from the people on the unrestricted Boards to jump back in?

My posited theory here, poorly articulated, is that members of smaller boards might find themselves drifting away from PB altogether unless 1) they've continued to participate fairly actively on the unrestricted boards; or 2) whatever small board they are on continues to stay active.

Just a theory

Mair

 

Thanks Henrietta (nm)

Posted by mair on January 24, 2005, at 21:56:12

In reply to Re: small town groups » mair, posted by henrietta on January 24, 2005, at 20:08:49

 

Re: gated communities

Posted by Dr. Bob on January 25, 2005, at 3:55:29

In reply to And another thing, posted by mair on January 24, 2005, at 21:55:18

> by my rough count, there are well fewer than 50 regular posters on every board except the meds board and probably on social. I'm sure the psyche board is used by more than 50 people, but recently, it's really only been used by 30-35 I think. So you really already have several "small town" boards.

They may feel like small towns to the regulars, but those who don't post there regularly, or even at all, might wish they could be more involved...

> This tells me that it's not size that you're intrigued with, so much as restrictions on use.

People do seem to hate the idea of restrictions!

Say there's a park. Should picnics there be open to everyone?

> > > 5. What happens if a member of a small board drops out or decides he or she needs to take a break from the Boards? Does he or she lose the spot? If there is an opening, who fills it?
> >
> > If access is restricted, maybe it would be more fair if posters did? And they might be considered to have dropped out if they haven't posted for a while.
>
> This is a tough one because people take breaks from Babble all the time, in fact many of us see breaks as being beneficial, and sometimes they're necessitated by personal circumstances or recommended by Ts.

Hmm... So maybe "a while" should be a relatively long time? The more spots that stayed open, the less active the board would be...

What if people could keep their spots, but the size of the group were then increased?

> > Maybe one way of looking at it would be, in a small town, it's generally easier to get to know your neighbors. And in the big city, it's generally easier to find something (in this case, information). So with a combination, you could have both neighbors you know and access to information.
>
> Here's a problem with your analogy. I live in a small town, and the notion that you get to know your neighbors more easily in small towns is a myth perpetuated by people who live in cities.

Have you lived in a big city, too? And found it just as hard, or harder, to get to know your neighbors there?

Maybe it's another myth, but I do think this site, at least, did have a different feel when it was smaller.

> I also think this will make the Board seem incredibly less inviting ... You can restrict us from posting on certain boards; you can't restrict us from reading posts on restricted boards. So you're going to increase the number of instances where someone feels that they're on the outside, looking in.

Here's a projective test I just made up. Visualize a park that's being used for a number of different picnics. Do you feel:

a. Like leaving because you're excluded by the people there.
b. Like staying to have your own picnic.

> Maybe if the interest isn't there, the concept won't really go anywhere.

I agree, the proof of the pudding is in the eating....

> My posited theory here ... is that members of smaller boards might find themselves drifting away from PB altogether unless 1) they've continued to participate fairly actively on the unrestricted boards; or 2) whatever small board they are on continues to stay active.
>
> Mair

I agree, but now there's only 1, so the addition of 2 would increase the chance of them staying, wouldn't it?

Also, if their small town board didn't stay active, they could move to a different one...

----

> I was taught, and I teach my son, that it is rude to have conversations in public that others can not join... "You can't say you can't play."

What if 45 others wanted to join a conversation? Or a game?

> I just don't think it's particularly polite to have boards for public view and private consumption.

How about private picnics in a public park?

> How about calling it what they are. Gated communities, not small towns.

OK, gated communities. Here's another projective test. Visualize a gated community. Now visualize yourself. Did you place yourself:

a. Inside the gated community.
b. Outside.

----

> Unless I sm missing something integral to this debate, I say "if it ain't broke, don't fix it".
>
> jujube

How broke it is may be in the eyes of the beholder...

----

OK, so my idea is that some posters would like the feel of a small town board. I was thinking the way to find out would be to open some new boards and:

1. Impose a limit on their size.

But I suppose there are other potential approaches. For example:

2. Let their members decide what size they want them to be.

3. Just see to what size they grow "on their own".

Would those be more palatable? Or are there even better alternatives? Thanks, everyone, for your help in thinking this through...

Bob

 

Re: gated communities

Posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 6:39:43

In reply to Re: gated communities, posted by Dr. Bob on January 25, 2005, at 3:55:29

> Maybe it's another myth, but I do think this site, at least, did have a different feel when it was smaller.

Is that it, Dr. Bob? Nostalgia? It would be a better reason than research. You can't go back, you know. You can't recreate something that is past within something that has moved on. Maybe this isn't what you wanted Babble to be, but it's what it is. You'd have better luck starting a new site, unlinked to Babble, and doing it all over again.

> Here's a projective test I just made up. Visualize a park that's being used for a number of different picnics. Do you feel:
>
> a. Like leaving because you're excluded by the people there.
> b. Like staying to have your own picnic.

You did indeed make that up. It's not even roughly analagous. Babble isn't an accomodation. It's a community. People don't come here because it's an accomodation. People come here because it's a community. It's *not* a park. Can't you see that? I'm crying to you - why can't you see that Babble is not a park! Parks are nice. Communities are nice. Babble is a community, not a park. Yahoo is a park. Oh please, Dr. Bob. Try to see the difference between Babble and Yahoo.

> > I was taught, and I teach my son, that it is rude to have conversations in public that others can not join... "You can't say you can't play."
>
> What if 45 others wanted to join a conversation? Or a game?
>
Then it would be a right jolly game.

> > How about calling it what they are. Gated communities, not small towns.
>
> OK, gated communities. Here's another projective test. Visualize a gated community. Now visualize yourself. Did you place yourself:
>
> a. Inside the gated community.
> b. Outside.

I can't answer that within the civility guidelines.

> Would those be more palatable? Or are there even better alternatives? Thanks, everyone, for your help in thinking this through...
>
> Bob

Better would be removing restrictions from the table. Better would be creating so many little esoteric boards that you could accomplish your objective (if your objective is size) without rudeness. Don't list them all on the main set of links. Have one link leading to a submenu for "small discussion groups" or something. Let the posters choose the topic, if you wish. Don't monitor them for civility guidelines, if you wish. A poster could suggest whatever small discussion group they wanted, for people who love dogs, or people who live in Montana. It could be an area that charges fees, or an area with separate registration, or whatever would suit your purpose - without being rude and without excluding people.

Dr. Bob, Babble is not a park. Gated communities are not small towns. They're not picnics. Gated communities are dividers. Please see that if your goal is truly not to study restrictions that there are less offensive ways to meet your goal! Babble is not a park. It's a group of people who gather together for a common purpose. It's a school, or a church, or if you wish a very large therapy group. Imagine a church allowing Sunday School classes having socials where people could watch the party but not enter. Or a school having clubs that weren't open to all based on nothing more than whimsy, but whose meetings were on school grounds during recess.

Why can't you see!!! You may be providing a service by offering server space for this community. You *are* providing a service and we thank you. But Babble is more than the server space. We don't *love* a server space. We love a community. Don't break the community into gated areas. Don't divide the community. Please. Please, I beg you.

 

Re: gated communities

Posted by saw on January 25, 2005, at 7:42:53

In reply to Re: gated communities, posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 6:39:43

I can't believe I started this. I wish I had never asked about reading other boards.

Dr Bob - please forget I ever asked. Please.

Sabrina

 

Re: gated communities » saw

Posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 9:04:21

In reply to Re: gated communities, posted by saw on January 25, 2005, at 7:42:53

Sabrina, Please don't blame yourself. This is an old old idea of Dr. Bob's. And an old old point of contention between us. Nothing you did was the cause. I'm sure Dr. Bob just thought it was time to reopen the issue.

Dinah

 

Dr. Bob, could we try something?

Posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 9:18:11

In reply to Re: gated communities, posted by Dr. Bob on January 25, 2005, at 3:55:29

I clearly care about Babble. I know you do too. And transference quite aside, I care very much about you, based on the part of you you've been willing to share with us. I realize I don't know all of you.

My therapist sometimes says he gets frustrated with me because I don't listen as much as I try to prove my point. I say I get the same feeling from him. And he has the grace to agree. I see something similar going on here.

I clearly don't understand your deepfelt desire for what you consider small town boards. But I want to understand. I think it's worth understanding, and I'm willing to invest the energy to understand. I'm even (reluctantly) ready to put aside my moral objections to restrictions long enough to try to understand.

I get glimpses now and again that intrigue me. The fact that you put enough thought into it to consider different background colors for different boards. Your mention of how things used to be on Babble.

Can you do what you've been asking others to do lately? Take a risk, expose a bit of yourself, and tell us what small town boards mean to you without trying to convince us that they'd be good for Babble?

I care about you, Dr. Bob. I may not know Bob Hsiung, but I know Dr. Bob enough to care. I don't like to fight or feel frustrated or angry.

Can we stop trying to convince each other long enough to listen and try to understand and try to reflect back that understanding? Then we can go back to trying to convince each other. :)

(Although I realize my impotence. Trying to convince you is all I have, you know.)

 

An impertinent question, Dr. Bob.

Posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 10:13:43

In reply to Dr. Bob, could we try something?, posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 9:18:11

One thing many people notice when reading the archives is that when Babble was much smaller you used to participate more. Babble's a terrific community, and perhaps it's frustrating to you to feel that you can't really participate in it any more? That if you answer one post, the expectation will be that you'll answer many and you just can't physically do that because there's not enough time in the day? And if you join in some conversations and not others, you'll be considered playing favorites?

I could be completely off base here, but I think it would be frustrating to want to laugh at a joke, or join in a conversation and feel constrained by circumstances to watch from an Olympian distance.

I remember back to high school and college. There were some teachers who managed to maintain respect and order while also participating in the classroom community. So I think it is possible to do.

If I'm completely nuts here, feel free to tell me so. I don't have a large data pool, so I won't be offended. I'm just trying to understand.

 

horrible, horrible, horrible

Posted by AuntieMel on January 25, 2005, at 16:40:41

In reply to An impertinent question, Dr. Bob., posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 10:13:43

I spent all my life feeling like I didn't fit in anywhere.

I am deeply afraid that Babble is now going to prove I was right.

 

Auntie Mel?

Posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 16:45:59

In reply to horrible, horrible, horrible, posted by AuntieMel on January 25, 2005, at 16:40:41

Is it my impertinent question that makes you feel like you don't fit in? :)

 

Re: horrible, horrible, horrible

Posted by Jai Narayan on January 25, 2005, at 20:46:00

In reply to horrible, horrible, horrible, posted by AuntieMel on January 25, 2005, at 16:40:41

Dear Aunti Mel....
I am concerned.
What is going on?
We can't lose you.
you are important to my well being.
my best to you
Jai Narayan

 

Auntie Mel?

Posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 20:55:17

In reply to Auntie Mel?, posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 16:45:59

Have I offended in some way? You never answered my "I miss you" post on Social, but I'm trying hard to be less self centered, and decided to assume you hadn't seen it.

But I do miss you and enjoy your company. If perchance I have in any way offended, I would like to have a chance to make amends?

On the other hand, I also perfectly understand just not feeling well.

 

Re: horrible, horrible, horrible

Posted by alexandra_k on January 25, 2005, at 21:44:37

In reply to horrible, horrible, horrible, posted by AuntieMel on January 25, 2005, at 16:40:41

My interpretation of Auntie Mel's post was that she was expressing support for not having gated communities. That implementing gated communities would result in her feeling unwelcome.

Of course I have no idea really.

Hopefully she will come back to clarify...

 

Re: gated communities » Dr. Bob

Posted by jujube on January 25, 2005, at 23:44:01

In reply to Re: gated communities, posted by Dr. Bob on January 25, 2005, at 3:55:29


> > Unless I sm missing something integral to this debate, I say "if it ain't broke, don't fix it".
> >
> > jujube
>
> How broke it is may be in the eyes of the beholder...
>
> Bob

I don't disagree with you, as I am sure that you will not disagree with me that it not needing fixing is also in the eye of the beholder(s). And, with all due respect, it would appear that those beholders who seem happy with the status quo have made their views known, but the beholder who sems to believe a change may be necessary, has not.

I guess at this point in a policy debate (which this is to some degree), the beholder who feels it is broke would do a number of things: describe the purpose(s) for which it was created and the goals the creater hoped to achieve by creating it; the positives and negatives of its evolution; how its evolution has either enhanced or taken away from its ability to fulfill the purpose for which it was created and options on how to improve it so that it can continue to achieve the goals of its creater while meeting the needs of its users.

Change can be a scary and intimidating thing for a lot of people. I think it is only human nature to resist change and try to maintain the status quo (which can be a very comfortable and safe state). However, if a change is presented in the right way, it is often times embraced and applauded rather than resisted. I guess it's all in the packaging sometimes.

Anyway, just wanted to respond to your comment.

 

Re: a quiet park on a lake, by an open field

Posted by Dr. Bob on January 26, 2005, at 0:38:03

In reply to Re: gated communities » Dr. Bob, posted by jujube on January 25, 2005, at 23:44:01

> I clearly don't understand your deepfelt desire for what you consider small town boards. But I want to understand.
>
> Dinah

I just think some posters would like the feel of smaller boards?

--

> Change can be a scary and intimidating thing for a lot of people. I think it is only human nature to resist change and try to maintain the status quo (which can be a very comfortable and safe state). However, if a change is presented in the right way, it is often times embraced and applauded rather than resisted. I guess it's all in the packaging sometimes.
>
> jujube

Thanks for your response. Some people do seem concerned that a change like this would be for the worse. Do you have any advice on how to package it more attractively? :-)

Bob

 

The subject header was good :-) (nm) » Dr. Bob

Posted by alexandra_k on January 26, 2005, at 0:50:55

In reply to Re: a quiet park on a lake, by an open field, posted by Dr. Bob on January 26, 2005, at 0:38:03

 

Thanks for the comfort Dinah (nm) » Dinah

Posted by saw on January 26, 2005, at 1:36:35

In reply to Re: gated communities » saw, posted by Dinah on January 25, 2005, at 9:04:21


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