Most of us are aware of our relative inability to change anything in the world. Most of us have no power to speak of, few connections and no opportunities that would allow us to do something meaningful. What I will say now is counter-intuitive. Everything we do counts and everyone is important. It's counter-intuitive because it really doesn't feel that way and I get that. At the same time we have, these days, a body of scientific work that shows how ideas, news, information and viruses are propagated. When we analyze the data we find that, time and again, all these things move along connections that are relatively predictable and somewhat visible to our analysis but at the point where they appear to spin out of our ability to control them, they do not.
What happens in moments like that is that a single individual, network node or cell becomes a gateway to an entirely different part of the connected network and at that point we get a runaway effect. To get a little better grasp of what I am talking about read this review on Malcolm Gladwell's latest book and also check out what we know of superspreaders.
Beyond the downbeat nature of the two examples I've used lies a deeper connection: we all live in a mostly transparent, interconnected world. Even within the relative protected environment of The Hive what we say and how we say it affects many more people than just the ones who immediately see our posts or choose to directly engage with them. We have no idea what effect this has and what then happens to those who read what we write as a result.
The potential however is there and we all have the ability to change perceptions and affect experiences. It is a little sobering because it makes us realize just how responsible we are for people we may not even know. It should also be a little heartening to realize that people we don't even know also feel a little responsible for us. It is this sense of shared responsibility that makes us all part of the human family.
We may face unique problems. We may be isolated. We all, for sure, struggle with something. But here's proof that alone we aren't. We truly matter whether we know it or not.