The Space Between

The Space Between

Exploring the space between life and work

Episodes

  1. 3d ago ·  Video

    You Are Not Forgotten or Expendable

    A friend posted to a private list feeling forgotten, expendable, not interesting or important enough. I read it and felt it immediately, because I know that feeling from the inside. The gap between what you know and what you feel is what makes it so hard. I can run through the list of people who genuinely care about me and still wake up the next morning feeling like garbage because nobody noticed whatever I thought would be noticeable. The logic doesn't hold up under inspection, but you can't inspect your way out of it when you're inside it. The standard advice (walk, water, sleep, eat) is all true and genuinely helpful, but what actually moves the needle for me is being pulled into a situation where I have to interact with the world outside my own head. A neighbor stopping me on the way to my truck, a friend needing technical help, my kids, my wife, a random interruption. The embarrassment of acting like I don't matter to the people around me overrides the brain signal saying I don't. The frustrating part is you can't always force it. When you're feeling invisible, the last thing you want to do is reach out and risk confirming that nobody cares enough to respond. If you're in that place right now, feeling forgotten or not enough in whatever direction, the opposite is true. Knowing that and feeling that are two completely different experiences, and I'm not pretending otherwise. But if it helps to have someone on the other end, reach out. And if things are darker than a rough morning, please seek proper help. You deserve more than a video for that. Published on Subwave https://subwave.app/@thespacebetween/post/you-are-not-forgotten-or-expendable

    5 min
  2. May 22 ·  Video

    Threads Feels Like Twitter Used To

    A post about the Survivor finale sparked a real back-and-forth with Eliza, a former contestant, and pulled a whole pocket of Survivor fans into the thread. That kind of spontaneous, cross-cultural collision is exactly what made early Twitter worth checking, and it's what Threads is quietly recreating. The platform has somehow managed to stay culturally mixed and largely tolerable, whether through algorithmic tuning, actual moderation, or both. Threads sits in a different category than Mastodon, Bluesky, or the other networks that filled the post-Twitter gap. Those platforms are good for finding specific communities, but they don't produce the moment where sports, entertainment, and tech all bump into each other in real time. That interaction also brought around 200,000 new followers, which is a nice side effect, but the more telling detail is that Threads is now a place where those moments happen at scale, with random people, famous or not. One thing Threads hasn't cracked yet is the logo moment. TV commentators still link to their Twitter accounts. Movie credits still promote Instagram and Facebook pages. When a platform's icon starts appearing in broadcast graphics and end-credit crawls, it signals mainstream acceptance as infrastructure. Threads isn't there yet, but the recent logo tweak, moving away from something that reads as a plain @ sign, suggests Meta knows it's close. Published on Subwave https://subwave.app/@thespacebetween/post/threads-feels-like-twitter-used-to

    4 min

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Exploring the space between life and work