RUNNING FROM THE HURD There are various aspects of my personality that are quite distinct from most people, though as I know so few people these days it can be an easy thing to forget. One is a strong aversion to crowds and groups in general. This seems to apply equally to what I do online as it does to real life, though I'm not entirely sure if it's for the same reason. I do like interacting with others in many contexts, and even working with people (though mainly with more physical tasks). But there's a critical mass, a number of other people, above which I'm simply repulsed by them, by their group, their hurd. It may be a simple matter of control, that the more people are in a hurd the more difficult it becomes to influence it, while its power to influence you gets stronger. It's not simply a case of being told what to do, I don't mind that at all so long as the authority and responsibility is clear and set in stone (unfortunately it rarely is to the degree that would make me comfortable), it's that I should personally want to serve the hurd. It's a fear that I've talked about before, of the hurd shaping my own opinions, often bypassing the cold reasoning that I use to form them on my own. In real life this is realised quite physically. Basically if I see a large group moving in one direction, I'm often greatly inclined to go the other way. A memorable manifestation of this was during a shool trip to Melbourne (the photos that I tool back then actually look a little dated now, which shows how time is marching on), where at one stage we were let loose to explore the CBD in our own little groups. Though I was with some friends, the need to separate from the hurd grew increasingly strong. I kept making excuses to leave them, sort-of hoping to lose them. It ended up fairly silly in the picture that I remember of it, with me shadowing them from the other side of the road. But as much as I was aware that my behaviour was illogical, and as I remember it I was getting on with them as well as I ever did, staying with them just didn't feel right. I don't remember exactly how many people were in that little hurd, probably only five or so, actually I barely remember them at all, but to the question of how many other people I can cope with being in a group/hurd setting with, I don't really know. I think it's quite possibly just one other person. Above that I can either clearly dominate or be subservient, but if it's an environment of shared responsibility then I just want to run away. Not that the hurd needs to be responsible for anything important, indeed that would normally lead to some sort of leadership structure forming (though often not rigid enough for me). This doesn't seem like it should apply directly to my interactions with strangers on the internet. Certainly there the number of others who I can cope with greatly exceeds one. But then I have always favoured slow, low traffic, forums. Hence once I found Usenet in its dying, many would say already dead, days it was a natural habitat for me. Much more recently, Gopher has become a similar case, and though I feel like I would welcome more feedback here maybe that wouldn't really be to my benefit? It might be quite different though. I do feel with very active online discussion forums/platforms that it's a burden to keep up with all the discussion. It is often frustrating to post something, then come back the next day to find the discussion mutated quite away from your point, which itself remains unadressed because you weren't there to respond within the first few replies. Maybe both cases are just evidence that I'm a control freak, a defeatest one who would rather not have anybody to control than be unable to control the people who he knows. But hey what's wrong with that anyway? To be honest this post was going to go in quite a different direction except that one paragraphs ago I ran out of time to finish it in the morning, and coming back now in the evening I feel a bit different about the whole topic. It is a fickle sort of self analysis that can't even support itself for the duration of one day. Right now I'm much less apologetic - I would pride myself in deliberately avoiding any hurd. It follows the average of human thought, the core biases of instinct and emotion. One should avoid it, or else perhaps even use it. Of course many human hurds are directed by other interests: business, political, social. Hurds direct other hurds. Like cattle hurding cattle. All quite determined and purposeful yet of little intellectual separation - idiots priding themselves on their domination of idiots, while taking equal pride in their subservience to other idiots. Why would I choose to involve myself in such a whirlpool of lunacy? - The Free Thinker