10 tips to get the most out of Spotify

I have written a lot in the past about anxiety and depression, and the various coping mechanisms that I have used. Distraction techniques in particular have their successes and their failures; but in any case they are still useful.

Two of the ways I distract myself from anxiety, trying to prevent myself from over-thinking, are by playing games, or by listening to music. For the former I use Steam and for the latter I use Spotify. As part of my recent reflective mood I went back to take a look at my Spotify Wrapped from 2022 and wanted to share some tips on how to get the most out the app.

For context here are a few highlights from my 2022 wrapped. I spent 27,854 minutes spent listening to music, higher than 83% of other listeners in the UK. My most played track was 'Nothing Breaks Like A Heart - Darren Porter Remix' by Raz Nitzan which I played 208 times. I played 2,404 songs in total spanning 2,154 artists, so I think it's fair to say I get more than my moneys-worth out of the service.

Déjà vu

If you read my previous post you'll not be surprised to learn that I haven't been in a great place mentally for the past few days. I've been trying to make decisions about my future and where I want to go from here. In an attempt to understand where I am and how I got here I decided to look back at my journey. I have had several blogs over the years, all of which have been purged from the internet for various reasons, but I have backups of a few of them that were lucky to survive the hard drive crash a few years ago. The most popular of those blogs had over 600 posts when I took it down so there was quite a wealth of content to dive into.

Upon reflection I can honestly say that I have grown as a person for one simple reason, I hated what I read. It's not that any of it was particularly offensive or grating, far from it, most of it was quite benign, but that was part of the problem. I've always stressed the little things and let the big things take care of themselves, and my past writing really shows that. I didn't like what I read because most of it alluding to my daily struggles and although I am sure many people took comfort in knowing they weren't alone when they read it, for me looking back it just dredges up memories I would rather forget.

The Burden of Proof

I've been in two minds when it comes to just how much of this story I want to share but to be honest at this point I feel somewhat lost and unsure what to do. I don't expect a response to this post, I just wanted to put it out there into the Universe, if not for any other reason than maintaining my own sanity.

Almost a year ago I applied for a job and heard no reply; that's pretty standard as many job-seekers will tell you, the courtesy of a reply even a rejection seems to be something of a bygone era at this point. I originally thought nothing of this, it was just another application in a long line of applications that had been ignored. Then 5 months went by and out of nowhere I got an invitation for an interview. Now I know some places have backlogs but 5 months seems like quite the delay between a closing date and an invitation for an interview.

Steven has just signed in

The world has changed a lot in the last 20 years but one thing has remained constant and that is our desire to connect. In a recent post I wrote about the nostalgia for social media that actually served its purpose in creating social connections. I have thought about this a lot, the question of a world without social media and I've realised the emphasis on connections we form online today is very much public in nature. Whether you define that boundary as encompassing the world in its entirety of a limited subset of people from within it, the focus remains the same, to engage in a way that others can see.

In reflection I have come to realise that the death of platforms like MSN marked the point where this shift first occurred. In the days of MSN the emphasis was on one-to-one connections. You created an account and could add as many people as you liked but your conversations were one-to-one and private. Group conversations could be created but these were session based, ending when you closed the application requiring you to recreate them if you wanted to continue a conversation in a group. Despite the fact that apps like WhatsApp and Signal exist to fill the gap formed by the absence of the likes of MSN there is a fundamental difference between the two - you had to sign in to MSN. If you didn't sign in then you couldn't be reached, you weren't constantly connected available on demand.

From a distance

We are more connected today than we have ever been as a society. That level of interconnection comes with many benefits and many drawbacks. There's a lot to be said about the always-on state of the internet and the extent to which we make ourselves available to others but I feel those conversations have been somewhat exhausted in recent years.

The Covid-19 pandemic had many transformative impacts on society as a whole but I think the necessity of working from home and blurring of personal and professional boundaries brought significant attention to the need to division and distinction between the two.

What would a world without social media look like?

What would a world without social media look like? You might think that question is easy to answer, citing historical precedent attempting to make the case that a time before social media existed should form the basis of the answer, but that would be dismissive. In the last 20 years social media has fundamentally changed our society and left a lasting impression upon all of us, even those who don't actively use it have been affected by it.  A post-social world would not look like our pre-social world.

One thing is for sure though in my mind, the golden age of social media is dead. That's not to say it will disappear overnight, far from it in fact. When we look at other forms of media like television, film, music, and magazines, they have all had periods in time we refer to as their golden age, in some cases multiple. Their golden age, defined predominantly by the peak of our consumption of that form of media lasted for a similar period of time. Despite each of these forms of media now existing post-peak they are still present, still producing content, and we still consume them in significant quantities. The power and influence that they once held however has now been put in check.

The Static Evolution of a Restless Mind

What you know is not fixed, it is fluid, forever changing. When we learn, we add to what we know, but sometimes we chip away at the foundation we once thought would stand the test of time. When I was younger I liked to observe more than participate in social situations. I would watch intently always present in the moment, when others thought that I was miles away or lost in thought, I was processing everything that I perceived. The intergenerational conflict that I now realise is perpetual, was something in particular that amused me. Even as a teenager I was able to comprehend that change was abrasive and that people always resisted it, even when they were able to recognise that change was in their best interests, their self doubts and their desire to hold onto the past for good or for bad, made them hesitant.

With age I have come to realise that your attitude to change depends a lot on your frame of reference. As a teenager, for me and my peers the world we knew was the one we were experiencing in that moment. Growing up in Northern Ireland there was a lot of reflection and a great importance placed on remembering the past, but what was exceptional about my adolescence was that remembrance was not borne of nostalgia and longing for bygone years, it was very much a warning; the past was not something my generation romanticised it was something we never wanted to return to. The outcome of that atmosphere was the nurturing of an entire generation that was focused on the future instead.