From the Compost Heap header. A pencil style illustration of a compost heap with flowers and plants growing around it. A bee buzzes by and a white rabbit hops by.
  • “What are we doing with all these links, anyway? We’re weaving the web tighter. Making introductions. Maintaining provenance. It’s meaningful, especially now, as AI systems work in the opposite direction: denaturing the links, melting down the chains of connection.”

    Robin Sloan

    Read more: untitled post 156078702
  • “The best time to establish alternative, non-algorithmic networks of communication & affinity was five years ago.

    The second best time is today!”

    Robin Sloan

    Read more: untitled post 156078297
  • “The best time to establish alternative, non-algorithmic networks of communication & affinity was five years ago.

    The second best time is today!

    Over the years, I’ve distributed many zines through the mail. Those have been one-off productions, which is to say, pageants of minor chaos, always with the sense, as the last zine went out the door, of skidding into home plate.

    The best time to estab­lish alternative, non-algorithmic net­works of com­mu­ni­ca­tion — to forge durable links in phys­ical space — to insist upon the demo­c­ratic neces­sity of a muscular, uni­versal postal ser­vice — was five years ago.

    The second best time is today.”

    Robin Sloan

    Read more: untitled post 156078831
  • “Suddenly, you don’t follow people as you do on social media, but you follow their curiosities. This makes a much richer and sprawling environment to explore.”

    Kristoffer writing about are.na 

    Read more: untitled post 156078228
  • Refining my Online Ecosystem

    After trying out several different blogging and newsletter platforms here’s what I’ve settled on for 2025 (and hopefully beyond!)

    No affiliate links. Just sharing in case it’s helpful.

    Newsletter 💌

    This month I transitioned my monthly newsletter to Buttondown. It’s a paid service, but they do not take a percentage of paid subscriptions. The main reason I chose to move is that Buttondown offers RSS-to-email. Which means it can auto publish your blog posts as a newsletter! This is going to save me HOURS of formatting.

    Beehiiv almost solved this problem by doing the opposite. But the blog posts were always badly formatted with HTML garble-de-gook I had to delete. I did a quick test with Buttondown and the process is super clean.

    I’ve also been able to transition my paid subscribers who more than cover the cost. (I will say Substack’s AI Chat Bot made this as hard as possible, but Buttondown’s customer service is really helpful. Definitely a case of “you get what you pay for.”

    Blog ✏️

    After trying A LOT of blogging platforms I’m back on WordPress.org where I can have everything under one roof. I used WP years ago and wish I’d never moved away. There’s nothing like WordPress when it comes to robust blogging systems.

    I’ve set up a blog with multiple categories (Compost Heap, Zines, Photos, Scraps) and a tag system and I’ll be moving over archives one month at a time. I’m really excited to invest my time into my own website rather than pouring it out into social media.

    WordPress.org is free, but you have to pay for hosting. I’m using Hostinger and it’s too soon to recommend it, but I’ve found their platform easy to manage so far (versus others I’ve used and hated *cough* Bluehost *cough*.) I also love OnlyDomains for easy domain name registration and hosting.

    Podcast 🎧

    I’m also moving my podcast off Substack and back to Red Circle. Because I was an early adopter I was grandfathered in to a lifetime free plan so I may as well be using that.

    Moving the archives and show notes is a long term project.

    Which brings me to…

    Taking my TIme ⌛

    I confess that I haven’t made a clean break with Substack yet.

    At some point I might leave completely, but I may as well take my time with the transition. I’ve taken the nuclear option in the past and lots posts and regretted it.

    There are a few reasons:

    1. I have 172 posts that need to be moved. Many of them are multimedia and have elements that do not export and import easily. If you export Substack files and import to WordPress the photos don’t move and you have to do it manually. (It looks like they are there, but they are loading the photos from Substack’s servers.) It doesn’t even try to move audio files, transcripts, etc. So Self Pub 101 and Crowdfunding 101 will remain there for now.
    2. Anyone who has linked to Substack posts I’ve written will be looking for them there. As I transition out I can leave a breadcrumb for people to find the post on my website, but there’s no quick and easy way to do this.
    3. Since I’m staying for the reasons above I’m also going to take advantage of the “network effects” while they last. Maintaining Substack (my own and Neurokind) as a quarterly newsletter for my publishing imprint.
    4. Keeping a portion of my list on Substack keeps me under the 900 subscriber threshold (when Buttondown when the prices triple.) Anyone who hasn’t opened an email since moving off Substack was moved back into that ecosystem.

    Read more: Refining my Online Ecosystem
  • Rediscovering the Gift Economy

    (Or) The Internet Before It Became a Capitalist Hellscape

    The year is 1999.

    Every morning I sit down at a computer that looks roughly like this:

    Screenshot of Meg Ryan in You've Got Mail. She is at her bookshop with a blocky gray 1990s desktop computer on the counter.
    You’ve Got Mail, 1998

    And I engage with an Internet that is much different than our own. Rather than being served up content from various data mining corporate entities I am very intentional with how I spend my time.

    1. I doodle while listening to this insufferable sound as I waited for the Internet to load.
    2. Log into Wotmania and check the message boards. (Every single day.)
    3. Check my email – hosted through the local phone company. There were so few messages each one was actually exciting.
    4. Visit other websites by “surfing the web” either from website to website through hyperlinks or typing very specific and intentional search terms into search engines. When I found something I loved I would bookmark it to come back to.
    5. Join a virtual scavenger hunt called Cyber Surfari where search engine Lycos partnered with various collaborators to hide clues across websites for participants to find. It was sponsored by Discovery Channel, Hewlet Packard, and National Education Association. The time I spent participating in Cyber Surfari had an outsized impact on my ability to find what I’m looking for online.
    Tiny screenshot of Cybersurfari website. Pale yellow text and pixelated icons on a black background. Gray and blue windows border around the frame.

    4. When I did find what I wanted I often printed it out. One printout I still have in the attic is Lewis Carrol’s Eight or Nine Wise Words About Letter Writing. I also printed quotes and images (rarely because ink was expensive) for my actual cork board.

    6. Log into NaNoWriMo message boards every day of October and November.

    Screenshot of National Novel Writing Month circa early 2000. A plan white website with black text and an illustrated typewriter.

    6. Save drafts of my novel on 3 1/2 floppy disks.*

    Three sizes of floppy disks on a white table.
    The smallest of these 3 and the only floppy disk which wasn’t actually floppy. We used the larger kind when I was a kid. Source.

    The Internet wasn’t “better” but it was more intentional.

    Furthermore, what we’ve gained in image resolution and loading times we’ve lost in connection. Those early days of the Internet it felt like a playground of possibility. Websites weren’t easy to monetize yet.

    Everything on the Internet was a labor of love.

    Writing, images, even software was given freely.

    No one was using click bait because the structures that favored clicks weren’t yet created. Websites were shared and linked to because users found them interesting or funny.

    Over the last 6 months I’ve done a deep dive into the “early” Internet.

    Rory Gilmore researching for a newspaper article at night

    I took over 10,000 words of notes from various articles and books (which you can trawl here). I have more than enough to write a scholarly article. But now that I’m here I don’t really care to use them.

    It’s not about pointing with forensic clarity at the moment the Internet “changed.”

    (But I am wondering… when did we stop capitalizing it?)

    There was no single moment of corruption. Over time capitalism did capitalism. Spaces became monetizable and websites with a lot of traffic began to monetize.

    There are definitely benefits. Artists & makers & authors can find new audiences and patrons can support creators to keep doing what they love.

    But there’s also * waves hands * the rest of the garbage that came with monetization. The algorithms, the data collection, the noise, the click bait, the paywalls, the walled gardens, the misinformation, and the rise of reactionary content.

    Most of the time the Internet feels like this:

    Broadsheet of Fire in Sky from 1560. Source.

    But it didn’t always.


    The early Internet was a gift economy.

    Because there wasn’t a robust system of monetization the incentive you had to create online was to contribute to a growing gift economy.

    There was a culture of creating to share with others – from flashing GIFs, to “seamless” tiled backgrounds, to fan message boards. Artists and coders made free wallpapers and screensavers and even free software called “freeware.” I was part of a “sig tag” group where members used fonts and clip art to make signatures you could attach to “sign” your email. We’d type in each member’s name (around 15-20) and email the image files for the group.

    You gave your time and energy and others were generous in return. It wasn’t barter or trade. No one was keeping a tally of how much each person contributed. But there was an overwhelming spirit of generosity and reciprocity.

    Over the last year I’ve reconnected to the Wheel of Time fandom.

    Coming from the “creative entrepreneur” corner of the Internet it has been a complete culture shock (of the best kind.) And it reminds me of my early days online. It’s no coincidence that this fandom has been around since the early days of the Internet on forums like Theoryland and Dragonmount.

    Robert Jordan's The Wheel of Time large blue books in a line
    14 Blue Wheel of Time Books (image credit: Juniper Books)

    The Wheel of Time fandom still functions in a gift economy.

    For most of us it is not a job. It’s our passion. Among this fandom I have seen a depth of generosity that seems unfathomable.

    A gift economy functions because when you feel the warmth of generosity you want to contribute. When you walk into a new space and are welcomed you turn and welcome the next person. When you see someone create a cool fanwork you want to join in.

    I wrote a bit about this last August.

    One year later, I’ve found clarity.

    I cannot continue to pivot between these paradigms anymore.

    It’s dizzying.

    I want to engage in the Internet as a gift economy.

    I have no interest in selling art, content, memberships, or courses. Every time I have charged for this kind of content it has felt like I am pulled off course. I’ll continue writing and selling books, but I have no intention to leave my day job and become a “full time” writer. That allows me to make what I want without focusing on creating content that “converts to sales.”

    I don’t begrudge anyone who chooses a different path.

    If you’re a full time artist be a full time artist. I love that for you. I support lots of creatives online and will continue to do so.

    But if the capitalist framework isn’t sitting well for you there is another way.

    Your art isn’t any less valuable if you gift it.

    Is a handsewn quilt less valuable than a bedspread from Pottery Barn?

    Of course not.

    We need to stop letting the dominant culture brainwash us into undervaluing the gift exchange.

    What if we treated the Internet as a communally tended garden?

    Or a fermenting compost heap?


    But how would that work?

    Promotional photo for Ghost Writer. Three 90s kids gathered around a blocky desktop computer smiling and looking cool.
    To be fair, this is early 90’s, but I had to shoutout my show Ghostwriter.

    Let’s Internet like it’s 1999

    1. Create from your passion. Forget everything you’ve been told about offering value, funneling customers, and capturing eyeballs. Be authentically you and I guarantee that will resonate with someone.
    2. Give freely. I’m not going to begrudge you a shop or a paywall, but if you want to Internet like it’s 1999 most of what you offer is going to be for free. When you give freely people will want to support you when they have the opportunity to do so. A lot of the people harping on about funnels actually built their careers over decades of working for free. But they can’t sell you a $$$ marketing course for that.
    3. Spend your time and energy engaging with, appreciating, and sharing work that other people make. You are not the main character of this story. It is about us all.
    Gif of Nynaeve from Wheel of Time standing at a river and saying, "We all stand with you."

    Time to walk the walk

    I’m in the process of removing the paywall here on Substack.

    This month I’ve unlocked another session of Camp Kindle. (Last month I unlocked the Wonder session.) I created both of these for adults, but I’ve heard families really love doing the activities together.

    Vintage photograph of Girl Scouts refilling a water barrel at camp. They are in uniform and smiling.
    Vintage Photograph of Girl Scouts filling water bucket at camp. To my memory this was scanned from my personal collection and is archived here.

    If you’d like to support my work you can:


    Let’s Discuss

    To everyone: How can we create spaces of reciprocity and connection in an online world that wants us to see each other as a “target audience”? How do we reframe the value of our work outside of capitalism?

    To creative business owners: How can we make our businesses less extractive? How might we contribute to a gift economy alongside work that we do charge for?

    Cheers,

    Sarah signed with a swoopy S

    P.S. If you missed last month I’ve decided to remove the paywall and send snail mail to my paying supporters instead. You can read that here.

    ** Personally I experienced the crush of change online between 2013 and 2016 (which incidentally is the time we stopped capitalizing the Internet… maybe there is something there.)

    *** To bring more intentionality into my own Internet experience I’m spending more time on RSS and less time on apps, using Ecosia instead of Google (the AI snippets are killing me), and burrowing into my cozy Discord groups.

    Read more: Rediscovering the Gift Economy
  • Emotional Contagion

    I first heard about the Emotional Contagion scale while reading Becca Caddy’s screentime. It is a scale to measure how likely you are to take on emotions of others.

    The academic study says the mean (average) is 3.62.

    My score is 60 and I am more likely to take on negative emotions (anger, fear, anxiety).
    That means I’m having an experience that is markedly more intense than most people have when exposed to the same content.

    This explains why some people can drink from the “the internet firehose” (as John Naughton calls it) and still function in daily life while I find it impossible to continue coping if I am constantly exposed to anxiety inducing news or angry people shouting at each other. Witnessing intense emotions it physiologically overstimulating and causes dysregulation.

    The scale itself is in this PDF if you’d like to see what your results are. It’s based on self reporting your reactions to emotion so it does require a level of self awareness for an accurate score.

    Most people would be surprised by this because the stereotype is that autistic people lack empathy (which may be because we sometimes emote or react differently) whereas many of us are in fact hyper empathetic. Katherine May mentions that in this podcast chat with Glennon Doyle.

    It’s the same old story of autistics being told we are “worse at” dealing with something when we are in fact having a completely different experience. The test involves physiological reactions that your body has to emotional content and I’m amazed that most people don’t feel these things in their body. Food for thought as I consider boundaries with online platforms during an election year.

    Read more: Emotional Contagion
  • Why I’m Breaking Up with Substack

    Over the last year, Substack has been one of my biggest creative outlets. I’ve spent more hours writing, podcasting, and engaging on Substack than anywhere else.

    I don’t regret the time I’ve spent there or the connections I’ve made, but it’s time for a pivot.

    If you don’t know about Substack yet it’s part blog, part newsletter, part podcast, part YouTube channel, and (most recently) part social media.

    Last month they introduced a big change to their business model.

    Their app, which was previously a chronological feed of long form blog style content, introduced an algorithm and put their social media style posts up front and center. It becomes increasingly obvious that they are going after the “Twitter market” and / or whatever brings them the most money. It feels like watching Instagram slowly become something other than a photography platform.

    I’ve seen this movie and I didn’t like the ending.

    My platform is small, but I made about $300 in paid subs last year. The week before Substack introduced an algorithm I had been planning to merge my paid tier with my creative membership program The Companionship. I had spent hours setting up Substack to host my membership program and course portal. And I put it all on pause because it didn’t feel right.

    Something I really dislike about Substack’s social media feed is how poorly it handles blocking and muting. There are certain topics that aren’t good for my mental health that I continue to see. Sometimes I even see posts or comments from people I have specifically blocked. With this in mind I did not want to continue using an app that opened a social feed I had very little control over.

    I deleted the Substack app.

    Black underwood typewriter with an orange autumn leaf

    And I’m loving it.

    I’m back to experiencing Substack as a newsletter again.

    PRO TIP: I use a special email address just for newsletters I actually want to read. (I actually did this the year before I joined Substack.)

    Without the noise of the social feed I’m quite enjoying Substack again. And I’m less overwhelmed so I’m actually reading more posts.

    But I am breaking up with Substack as part of my business ecosystem and I’m reframing the paid tier as a tip jar.

    Here are the changes I’m making:

    1. No more paywalled content. Instead I’ll send a special thank you card or letter in the mail once a year.
    2. I’m archiving my best Substack posts here on the blog. (Like this one.)
    3. I’m only sending out newsletters once a month instead of weekly.
    4. I’m blogging again. If I want to write something between newsletters I’ll write here and link to it.
    5. My membership program and course portal have moved to Ghost.org. Ghost is a nonprofit that has been around for a decade. I’m not moving my free list because it does not have the discoverability or user base that Substack does. But it is a completely private, algorithm free space that is perfect for a membership and course portal. It costs a flat fee of $9 a month and does not take any percentage of sales. I’m still in the process of setting it all up, but you can see how my Ghost portal looks here.

    My free newsletter will remain on Substack so long as engagement remains high and growth feels authentic. (If I see too many spammy follows I’ll move the free list to Ghost as well.)

    Right now I’m having slow growth on Substack and seeing new commenters who are engaging with my work. The comment system is strong and facilitates good long term discussions better than any platform I have ever used. So I’m not keen to lose that.

    Let’s Discuss.

    Are you on Substack? How do you feel about the changes?

    Cheers,

    Sarah signed with a swoopy S
    Read more: Why I’m Breaking Up with Substack