Murraymakes

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Sunday, 28 July 2013

Love, hate and Twitter. Or, the good and bad of the internet.

Posted on 04:26 by Unknown

Yesterday, someone called me a pompous, sanctimonious arse.

I was ill for three days; that is why there has been radio silence. There was a fairly ordinary state of health one moment, and then – hit all over with hammers. It’s that kind of thing when you can hardly move or speak, just groan. It made me think of how I take health for granted. I always say of course, of course it’s the most precious thing, but I’m not sure I really stop to appreciate the actual truth of that. When your entire body hurts and you can’t move, nothing is worth anything. You could have a cellar full of rubies downstairs, and it would not matter a damn. I thought of all those people who struggle with chronic pain every day of their lives, and felt very small and very grateful.

Anyway, it’s a Sunday, so I’m going to tell you a rambling story. Yesterday, I was a bit better, but still very tottery, so I lay in bed with my swimmy head and Stanley the Dog gazing at me with his best Florence Nightingale eyes, and watched the racing. I still get rather grumpy with Channel 4 for aspects of their coverage – they have the maddening habit of putting banging, non-specific music over all their montages and even across Clare Balding saying interesting things about the history of Ascot, almost drowning out her accomplished words – but I do appreciate that they allow me to watch the racing live on their website. (I have no television in the bedroom.) It was good racing and even though my eyeballs felt like boiled sweets I was enjoying it.

A mighty German horse called Novellist absolutely hosed up in the big race of the day, under the great Johnny Murtagh, and, because it is that time of year, all thoughts turned to the Arc.

Twitter is fascinating in its sociological and cultural make-up. Quite unexpectedly, the racing community has adopted it wholesale, and you will find everyone there from jockeys to betting shop managers to clerks of the course to work riders. One of my favourite Twitter friends turns out to be the head of Coral, which I find rather grand. It’s clever too; he is so nice that I now bet with Coral as well as with William Hill, which is my default account.

So, immediately after the race, where the classy French horse, Cirrus des Aigles, underperformed, and the German horse smashed the track record, a great post-mortem broke out. One gentleman got very shouty and I suddenly could not deal with it, in my weakened state. Instead of sensibly just unfollowing him, I announced it.

This is the danger of social media. It’s in its infancy, and the rules and mores and small etiquettes are still being worked out. Also, I find that when I am in a Twitter storm, which happens usually during sporting events, I often type before I think. I get into a zone, and everything goes public. Some of my kind followers find this faintly diverting, but sometimes it is dangerous.

I did not mention the gentleman by name. I just wrote something like: ‘Am unfollowing cross people. Too weak.’

The cross people clearly knew who they were. Back came the reply: ‘Good riddance.’ Hm, I thought, mazily. Ungracious. I pondered what to do. He is a stranger, and I generally do not have conversations with him; the online ones who have the power to hurt are those with whom one has struck up a relationship. I was not wounded, but perhaps my pride, or something, was a little dented. Foolishly, I wrote another tweet. It went something like: ‘Don’t take it personally, cross people. Festivals of crossness must not be stopped. Just not my thing. Each to each.’

I admit, this was a bit passive-aggressive. The rational part of me knows that some people find a bit of expressed fury marvellously cathartic and invigorating. I believe ardently that speech must not be shut down. On a purely subjective level though, I really do hate it. I do wish that everyone was polite and minded their Ps and Qs. So I was being a little disingenuous. If I had been entirely honest, I would have said: oh, for God’s sake, Cross Person, stop being so grumpy and shouty and rude. I was especially narked because he was shouting at another racing person whom I rather like, and for not much reason.

And that was when he got really cross. ‘You are a pompous sanctimonious arse,’ he wrote.

Well, I thought, that’s that. I went back to the racing, and felt happy as clever, canny Sir Mark Prescott, one of most idiosyncratic characters in the whole of racing, had a quickfire double, with two tremendous, doughty campaigners, Big Thunder and Alcaeus, both of whom are on an unstoppable winning streak. I had them in doubles and trebles and a fivefold accumulator, and I won a shed-load of money, even with my viral load, and I felt that that would show the cross person.

But it’s slightly scratched away at me ever since. I was not hurt, because, as I have discovered online, you need to have built up a degree of intimacy for a sudden attack to hit the target. I am vulnerable on the blog, and on my Facebook page, but not to random Tweeters. On the other hand, there was a part of me that really did want to punish that rude person for being so disobliging and intemperate. I wanted to smack him back and hang him out to dry, even though I knew that would be ridiculous, and the only thing to do was gently move on.

Just as I was examining all these feelings, I came, rather late, to the saga of the Jane Austen hate club. I don’t know if you have followed this story. A woman called Caroline Criado-Perez started a campaign to get dear Jane on the British banknotes, and succeeded, and all was lovely, until she started getting a vicious, concerted set of tweets, some of them containing rape threats.

This put my little spat in perspective. I at once went over to sign a petition for Twitter to put up a Report Abuse button, so that these kind of haters can be dealt with. This felt meaningful and pointful, and I forgot my own tiny pinprick.

The whole thing made me think again about the nature of life online. I choose to regard the internet as a benign place, and treat it as such. Most of my blogs and tweets and Facebook posts are positive; I try to resist the temptation to let my inner bitch come out and dance. I feel I should confine her to the privacy of my own room. Unless Channel 4 Racing drives me to a pitch of distraction, which I admit it sometimes does, I attempt to emphasise the positive and skip over the negative.

In particular, when writing racing tweets, I have a very strict rule not to criticise jockeys, even if they do make a hash of a race, because I grew up with a jockey and I know damn well that even the most brilliant will have an off moment, run into traffic, misjudge the pace, and that they will be far too busy criticising themselves to have any need for outside help. Besides, I suspect that the armchair jocks have absolutely no idea what it must be like to have to make split-second decisions whilst going at forty miles an hour on half a ton of youthful thoroughbred, perched on a saddle the size of a postage stamp.

Generally, I find that I get back what I put in. At the very same time the cross man was calling me names, another lovely gent, with whom I have bonded over our mutual love of lurchers, was sending messages of ineffable funniness and sweetness. The good and bad were marching there together, and I chose to let the good win.

But I am perhaps a little naive, even wilfully so. As the blameless Caroline Criado-Perez found, you can do something which seems utterly ordinary and uncontroversial, and suddenly insane people are threatening to violate your very body.

As always, I’m never quite sure what to make of all this. I shall bash on in my hopeful view of the online world, because 90% of it is charming and funny and illuminating and generous and kind. I get glimpses of other lives, radically different from my own. I get sudden belly laughs from complete strangers when I am feeling low. People I shall never meet ask after Stanley the Dog. Properly useful information is shared. There really is wit, and quite often wisdom too.

There are moving collective outpourings, such as the very touching concern for St Nicholas Abbey, as he recovers from a life-threatening injury and two complicated surgeries. He is a great horse, not much known to the general public, but hugely beloved by racing aficionados, and the hope for his welfare touches my heart.

If the price I pay for this is the occasional sanctimonious arse, I think I may count myself lucky.

As for the real, vicious haters, the ones who attack women from behind the craven cloak of anonymity, the interesting thing about them is they do seem far outnumbered. The majority has risen up against them, pointed the finger and said no. They may never go away. We shall never know what private miseries and bitternesses drive them to their own twisted outpourings. But I do know this: they shall not prevail.

 

Today’s pictures:

Pouring with rain outside and still too tottery for pictures, so here are some quick beloveds:

Stanley the Dog does not give a bugger about the internet, BECAUSE HE HAS A GREAT BIG STICK:

28 July 1 23-07-2013 15-46-45

And now he is going to look for another one. You can’t keep a good dog down:

28 July 2 23-07-2013 15-47-23

And Red the Mare, after our last lovely ride, thinks only of the green, green grass:

28 July 3 24-07-2013 10-00-58

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in illness, light and shade, The Cross People, the internet, Twitter | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • The brain stutters and stalls. But dear Estimate is back with a bang.
    Work. Other work. Other work. One more piece of vital work. The last of these has the potential to translate into actual game-changing cash ...
  • Sunday. Horses, dogs, family, weather.
    The weather stopped for a moment today; there was even a ray of sunshine. We are surrounded by floods, though; one local town about eight mi...
  • Two sweet things; or, a horse story and a dog story
    Warning for length, horsiness, and dogginess.   The snow came again quite seriously, falling with intent all morning. I defy weather, and I ...
  • I relive the Derby and Red the Mare imitates her more famous cousin. Or, a shaggy horse story for a Sunday afternoon.
    It’s been a wild 24 hours. The Derby was one of the most dramatic I can remember. All the talk was of the mighty Dawn Approach, and my love ...
  • Saturday pictures
    The sweetest and happiest and calmest bit of my day – morning in the field: And random leaves, sheep, playing around with camera setti...
  • Pith. And pictures.
    And back to normal we go, the old routine swinging out on a Monday dawning with skies as black as pitch. Up to HorseBack, back to the comput...
  • All about Dawn Approach
    It is Sussex Day. My heart beats like a big brass drum. Even as I run around, down to ride the mare (our best one yet, leaving me smiling so...
  • Still ill
    Continuing unspeakable. I always think I am rather stoical and brave when I get a bug, and then I get one and am absolutely pathetic. I fant...
  • Out of whack
    I love the internet. I love most of the people on it. I love that its great power is often used for good instead of evil. But sometimes it k...
  • Not exactly a eureka moment.
    As is so often the way, the blog in my head was an absolute stormer. I was going to do a whole thing on manners. There was a piece on them o...

Categories

  • 12.12.12. (5)
  • 2000 Guineas (1)
  • a good day (44)
  • a productive day (1)
  • absurdity (2)
  • ad hominem (1)
  • admiration (1)
  • Afghanistan (2)
  • Aintree (3)
  • Al Kazeem (1)
  • ambition (1)
  • America (2)
  • American politics (2)
  • an education (2)
  • an ordinary day (19)
  • Andy Murray (3)
  • angst (3)
  • animals (2)
  • Anthony Knott (1)
  • AP McCoy (1)
  • arguments (1)
  • art (1)
  • Ascot (10)
  • assumptions (1)
  • authenticity (1)
  • autumn (2)
  • Autumn the Filly (9)
  • bankers (1)
  • Barack Obama (3)
  • Beacon Lady (1)
  • beauty (8)
  • Beckermet (1)
  • Beloveds (1)
  • betting (15)
  • Big Buck's (3)
  • birds (1)
  • birthday (3)
  • Black Caviar (1)
  • blogging (18)
  • blogosphere (3)
  • blossom (1)
  • books (1)
  • bookshops (1)
  • Boris Johnson (1)
  • breeding (1)
  • Brindisi Breeze (2)
  • Britain (6)
  • Britishness (4)
  • Britons (4)
  • brutality (1)
  • butching up (1)
  • calm (1)
  • Camelot (2)
  • cameras (1)
  • Campbell Gillies (1)
  • Captain Conan (1)
  • Carrickbeg (1)
  • carrying on (1)
  • Certify (1)
  • challenges (1)
  • chance (1)
  • Channel Four Racing (4)
  • character flaws (1)
  • Charlotte Dujardin (1)
  • Cheltenham festival (18)
  • children (1)
  • Christian Nock (1)
  • Christmas (8)
  • Clare Balding (2)
  • class (1)
  • cleverness (1)
  • Clive Brittain (1)
  • collective rejoicing (1)
  • computers (1)
  • confidence (1)
  • country life (1)
  • countryside (2)
  • Countrywide Flame (1)
  • courage (1)
  • cousin (1)
  • cricket (1)
  • critics (1)
  • Cumbria (1)
  • cynicism (1)
  • Danny Boyle (1)
  • David Cameron (2)
  • Dawn Approach (5)
  • death (11)
  • Desert Orchid (1)
  • dog pictures (4)
  • dogs (35)
  • domestic life (5)
  • Doris Day (2)
  • drama (2)
  • dreams (1)
  • dressage (3)
  • Dudley the Guide Dog (1)
  • Dynaste (1)
  • each to each (1)
  • Easter (1)
  • Edward the Puppy (2)
  • Emma Hutchison (1)
  • Epsom (1)
  • equal marriage (2)
  • Estimate (3)
  • etiquette (1)
  • Eton (1)
  • Evan Davis (1)
  • exhaustion (1)
  • extremism (1)
  • Facebook (2)
  • failure (1)
  • fairness (1)
  • family (68)
  • fear (3)
  • fillies (1)
  • flat racing (4)
  • Flemenstar (1)
  • flowers (2)
  • food (3)
  • force for good (1)
  • Frankel (13)
  • Frankie Dettori (1)
  • frenzy (1)
  • friendship (9)
  • garden (1)
  • gay marriage (2)
  • George Baker (1)
  • getting on with it (1)
  • glory (4)
  • going home (1)
  • Going south (1)
  • Gold Cup (1)
  • Gold medals (1)
  • good manners (4)
  • good news (4)
  • good things (2)
  • Goodwood (3)
  • grammar (2)
  • grand national (1)
  • gratitude (3)
  • greatness (1)
  • grief (21)
  • groundwork (1)
  • grumpiness (6)
  • guests (2)
  • Guide Dogs for the Blind (1)
  • hair (2)
  • happiness (4)
  • hats (4)
  • heart over head (1)
  • heartbreak (1)
  • Hello Bud (1)
  • help (1)
  • Henry Blofeld (1)
  • Henry Cecil (3)
  • highland games (1)
  • highs and lows (1)
  • hills (1)
  • history (1)
  • holiday (1)
  • home (4)
  • hope (11)
  • hopelessness (1)
  • HorseBack UK (40)
  • horsemanship (34)
  • horses (207)
  • Hot Snap (1)
  • housekeeping (1)
  • hubris (3)
  • human condition (1)
  • human flaws (4)
  • humility (4)
  • Hunt Ball (4)
  • Hurricane Fly (4)
  • idiocy (1)
  • illness (3)
  • Imperial Cavalier (1)
  • Imperial Commander (1)
  • incivility (2)
  • insomnia (1)
  • interesting people (2)
  • internet etiquette (2)
  • James Doyle (1)
  • James Fanshawe (3)
  • James Naughtie (1)
  • Jim Bolger (1)
  • Jock Hutchison (1)
  • John Donne (1)
  • John Gosden (3)
  • John Oaksey (1)
  • Johnny Murtagh (1)
  • journalism (1)
  • Joy (2)
  • jumping (4)
  • Jura the puppy (1)
  • Kauto Star (7)
  • Keith Douglas (1)
  • Kevin Manning (1)
  • kindness (7)
  • Lady Cecil (1)
  • language (3)
  • laughter (1)
  • Laytown Races (1)
  • leadership (2)
  • leaving (2)
  • Leviticus (1)
  • lichen (1)
  • life (78)
  • life goes on (1)
  • life lessons (34)
  • light (2)
  • light and shade (6)
  • lists (2)
  • logistics (1)
  • London (1)
  • Lord Leveson (1)
  • loss (21)
  • Lou Boos and Shoes (1)
  • love (186)
  • loveliness (131)
  • Lucinda Russell (2)
  • luck (3)
  • Mad Moose (1)
  • madness (1)
  • man of letters (1)
  • mares (1)
  • mares and fillies (1)
  • Mark Johnston (1)
  • marriage (1)
  • Martha Payne (1)
  • Mary King (1)
  • Michael Moore (1)
  • Miss Dashwood (1)
  • Miss Whistle (1)
  • missing (1)
  • Mitt Romney (3)
  • Mo Farah (1)
  • Monkerhostin (1)
  • Monty Roberts (1)
  • moods (12)
  • Mothers (1)
  • Mr William Hill (1)
  • musing (1)
  • my father (32)
  • My Godfather (1)
  • my idiot heart (1)
  • my mother (13)
  • My sister (8)
  • my village (3)
  • Myfanwy the pony (23)
  • mysteries of the heart (2)
  • Nathaniel (2)
  • national character (1)
  • national hunt racing (10)
  • natural disaster (1)
  • natural horsemanship (1)
  • nature (1)
  • new life (2)
  • New Year (1)
  • Newmarket (1)
  • Newtown (1)
  • Nicky Henderson (1)
  • Nicola Wilson (1)
  • Nigel Twiston-Davies (1)
  • Nijinsky (3)
  • Nina Carberry (1)
  • No time (1)
  • normality (1)
  • not a blog (1)
  • not answering the question (1)
  • obsessions (1)
  • Oklahoma (1)
  • Olympics (12)
  • Olympus PEN (1)
  • on the train (1)
  • One Good Thing (1)
  • one true thing (1)
  • Opposition Buzz (1)
  • Ortensia (1)
  • otherness (1)
  • Overturn (3)
  • pain and pleasure (1)
  • passion (1)
  • patience (1)
  • Patrick Mullins (2)
  • patriotism (1)
  • Paul Burns (1)
  • Paul Nicholls (2)
  • pedantry (1)
  • perfection (1)
  • perspective (4)
  • Photographs (6)
  • pictures (1)
  • Pigeon (18)
  • Plato (1)
  • poetry (1)
  • politeness (1)
  • politics (12)
  • polo (1)
  • pony (2)
  • possibility (1)
  • prejudice (1)
  • Prussian (1)
  • PTSD (1)
  • Quevega (5)
  • racing (78)
  • rain (1)
  • random thoughts (4)
  • randomness (3)
  • really quite dull (1)
  • Rebecca Curtis (1)
  • recipe (2)
  • Red Letter Day (3)
  • Red the Mare (192)
  • regret (1)
  • remembrance (1)
  • Remembrance Sunday (1)
  • Richard Hughes (1)
  • riding (51)
  • Riposte (1)
  • Ruby Walsh (6)
  • Ruler of the World (1)
  • Ryan Moore (2)
  • sadness (3)
  • Sam Twiston-Davies (2)
  • Sanctuaire (1)
  • saying the thing (1)
  • Scotland (22)
  • Scott Meenagh (1)
  • Seamus Heaney (1)
  • Secret Gesture (1)
  • Secretary of State for Scotland (1)
  • setbacks (1)
  • shame (2)
  • sheep (5)
  • sheer beauty (25)
  • Shirley Teasdale (4)
  • shopping (1)
  • show-jumping (1)
  • Simonsig (1)
  • singing (1)
  • Sir Graham Wade (1)
  • Sir Henry Cecil (5)
  • Sir Prancealot (1)
  • Sky Lantern (2)
  • slight oddness (1)
  • small life lessons (1)
  • small things (2)
  • snow (12)
  • snow dogs (3)
  • Snow Fairy (1)
  • social life (2)
  • social media (2)
  • Society Rock (1)
  • solipsism (1)
  • Somerset (1)
  • sorrow (8)
  • soup (2)
  • special green soup (1)
  • spring (5)
  • Sprinter Sacre (6)
  • Stanley the Lurcher (36)
  • sunshine (2)
  • support your local business (1)
  • swallows (2)
  • sweetness (7)
  • Syria (2)
  • tangents (1)
  • Teaforthree (2)
  • Team GB (6)
  • tears (1)
  • Tebay (2)
  • terrorism (1)
  • Test Match Special (1)
  • The Agent (1)
  • The Arkle (1)
  • The Ashes (1)
  • the bad news (1)
  • The Barefoot Trimmer (2)
  • The Beloved Cousin (5)
  • The blog (2)
  • the blogosphere (1)
  • The Borders (1)
  • The British (1)
  • The Brother-in-Law (1)
  • The Cousins (23)
  • The Cross People (1)
  • The Dalai Lama (1)
  • The Dear Readers (7)
  • The Derby (3)
  • The Duchess (13)
  • The Ducking Stool (1)
  • the economy (1)
  • The Expatriate (2)
  • The Farmer (2)
  • The Farrier (1)
  • The glen (1)
  • the good old men (1)
  • The Grand National (1)
  • the great mares (1)
  • The Hebrides (2)
  • The herd (15)
  • The Horse Talker (13)
  • The HorseBack foal (1)
  • the human condition (4)
  • the human heart (11)
  • the internet (6)
  • The Jubilee (1)
  • The Lockinge (1)
  • The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock (1)
  • The Man in the Hat (1)
  • The military (1)
  • The National Gallery (1)
  • the new regime (1)
  • the news (3)
  • The Oaks (1)
  • The Old Fella (3)
  • the old people (1)
  • The Older Brother (2)
  • The Older Niece (1)
  • the Olympics (1)
  • The Pankhursts (1)
  • the perspective police (3)
  • The Pigeon (56)
  • The Playwright (3)
  • The Point (1)
  • The Pony Whisperer (2)
  • the press (1)
  • The Queen (7)
  • the real world (1)
  • The Remarkable Trainer (1)
  • The royal family (1)
  • The Royal Meeting (5)
  • the small things (13)
  • The Smallest Cousin (1)
  • The South (1)
  • The Stepfather (1)
  • The Tarland Show (1)
  • the thoroughbred (1)
  • The Today Programme (1)
  • The vet (2)
  • the wisdom of horses (1)
  • The World Traveller (4)
  • The Young Gentleman (1)
  • The Young People (4)
  • The Younger Brother (3)
  • The Younger Niece (1)
  • theories (4)
  • therapy (1)
  • Things I Like (1)
  • things of beauty (1)
  • thinking (1)
  • thoughts (2)
  • three day event (2)
  • time (6)
  • Tina Cook (1)
  • Tom Daley (1)
  • Tom Queally (3)
  • Topham (1)
  • Toronado (2)
  • tragedy (1)
  • training (1)
  • travelling (1)
  • trees (5)
  • tribes (1)
  • triumph and tragedy (1)
  • trust (2)
  • TS Eliot (1)
  • Twitter (8)
  • utility (1)
  • Valentine's Day (1)
  • vanity (1)
  • village life (1)
  • walk (1)
  • weather (23)
  • weddings (1)
  • whim (1)
  • William Buick (2)
  • William Fox-Pitt (1)
  • Willy Twiston-Davies (2)
  • winter quarters (1)
  • wisdom (1)
  • women (2)
  • words (5)
  • words matter (4)
  • work (10)
  • worries (1)
  • writing (23)
  • writing workshop (1)
  • Writing Workshop 2013 (3)
  • York (1)
  • zebras (1)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (206)
    • ►  September (5)
    • ►  August (20)
    • ▼  July (24)
      • All about Dawn Approach
      • No time to blog
      • The seas of the internet continue stormy. But ther...
      • Love, hate and Twitter. Or, the good and bad of th...
      • No time
      • The bells ring; or, in which I refuse to be a cynic.
      • This land
      • A quiet Sunday dream
      • A quiet Friday
      • Writing Workshop, Day Four. Thirty things I know a...
      • Writing Workshop, Day Three. Structure, character ...
      • Writing Workshop, Day Two. The Good Critic and the...
      • Writing: The Fear
      • The Ashes; or, the wonder that is Blowers.
      • A good old shaggy horse story for the end of the w...
      • Stanley the Dog.
      • In which I must be realistic
      • Awesome Spirit: welcome to the world.
      • An amazing day; or, Andy Murray makes a nation swoon
      • Lost day
      • Musing on light and shade. Or, the good parts and ...
      • An easy choice.
      • One step at a time.
      • Drama; or, the arrival of the black helicopters
    • ►  June (26)
    • ►  May (22)
    • ►  April (26)
    • ►  March (26)
    • ►  February (27)
    • ►  January (30)
  • ►  2012 (294)
    • ►  December (34)
    • ►  November (30)
    • ►  October (28)
    • ►  September (28)
    • ►  August (22)
    • ►  July (31)
    • ►  June (25)
    • ►  May (26)
    • ►  April (30)
    • ►  March (29)
    • ►  February (11)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile