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In this issue: After a brief life update, I introduce an upcoming Listening Tour and share my plans to write about it every week or so. I end the issue by sharing a moment of delight – a glimpse into my own thriving.
Hat tip to Nick Gray: Thanks to my friend Nick for this intro idea, which I copied from his Friends Newsletter (I recommend subscribing if you like kind, enthusiastic, and geeky folks). I’ll start every issue this way so you can quickly skim and decide if you want to read it.
LIFE UPDATE
If we haven't connected in a while, you might not know that I defended my dissertation and joined a research center at Harvard Graduate School of Education called the Center for Digital Thriving. I'm a senior researcher and designer, and along with an awesome team, we're aiming to understand "digital thriving" and how to support it as a society, especially for young people.
We’re just getting started, but some of the things we did last year include creating four amazing classroom resources 📓 with Common Sense Education that help teachers and students have better conversations about technology, working with KQED’s show Above the Noise to produce videos 📽️ about design tricks and thinking traps, and publishing a report called Teaching for Digital Well-being where we share the 🔬 clinical practices (like cognitive behavioral therapy) that inform the work we do.
And since Harvard changed some of its HR policies during the pandemic, I didn’t have to move! Our team works from Cambridge, but also Atlanta, LA, Seattle (🙋), and exotic locales such as Connecticut. This was especially important to me because one of the hardest parts of moving away from NC was leaving my friends and family. In fact, I vividly remember the first time someone in Seattle saw me biking down the street and yelled out my name. I hadn’t realized until that moment how important it is to live in a place where people know your name. It’s taken years, but I am starting to feel that way here, too, and I am so grateful that I didn’t have to leave. Plus, we’ve reached near-maximum levels of coziness 👇.
I travel to Cambridge several times a year, but mostly, I have a remote work experience. The time I used to spend commuting ⛴️ — nearly four hours a day (!) — is now filled with work. I typically start my workday shortly after our rooster, Hagrid, wakes me up (and undoubtedly many others), and I find it hard to stop working, too. I love my work, but after a year, I started to feel as if my life had shrunk to the small desk that my laptop sits upon.
THE “BECK SUSTAINABILITY PROJECT”
It’d gotten bad enough that my colleagues developed an acronym, BSP, which stood for “Beck Sustainability Project,” a collective effort to help me avoid burning out.
Aside: You may notice an irony in the fact that I moved immediately from writing an entire dissertation about “restorative practices” to working in such a depleting way that my colleagues invented a shorthand to keep me from exhausting myself. To this, I simply say, show me a dissertation that isn’t about some deep-seated personal issue that the dissertater faces.
Feedback on my performance was glowing, but my colleagues gently nudged me to stop trying to save the day. For a while, they even deployed the following gif from The Incredibles as a reminder.
THEN EM HAD AN IDEA
My work trips to Boston reminded me how much I missed being out in the world and especially connecting with strangers. I mentioned this to our director (and the originator of BSP), Emily, and later that day, she Slacked me with an idea.
Her idea was for the Center to conduct a “Listening Tour” — a six-month effort to talk to as many people as possible about “digital thriving,” and at the end of that time, to come up with a robust and evidence-based definition for it. Em saw an opportunity to inform our future resources and research, and she saw an opportunity to contribute to my own thriving in the process.
BUT WHAT EVEN IS A LISTENING TOUR?
Where will we go? Who will we talk to? What questions will we ask? If I chat with a stranger on a train about their best tech habits, do I need to get their consent?
We are actively figuring all of this out. In fact, just this week, we’ve started our IRB application, which is so complex that it requires a visual flowchart to navigate our data collection protocols (more on this in a future issue). I plan to reflect on everything I’m learning here, and I hope this Substack becomes a safe place for me to find my voice as a scholar and a safe place for all of us to reflect on this provocative idea — that we can thrive in a tech-filled world.
Until next week, when I’ll share why I named the Substack “Making Thriving Visible.”
p.s. As promised, here’s a glimpse into making my own thriving visible. Despite the bustle of a long working day, I try to take an hour to spend time with Lewis at a nearby beach. Watching him splash in the waves and play with other dogs brings me uncomplicated joy.
Beck! Three things:
1. Congrats on all that you've accomplished and your new project!
2. Thank you for the all the ways you influence and inspire by taking the time to share.
3. Feeling super excited to read more from you.
:-)
So thrilled that you are sharing your honest, generous, meaningful journey with us here. #nocapes #allheart